EPS of $2.54 missed analyst expectations in Q2, falling short of the $2.75 estimate.
Revenue was $444.7 million, 19.7% below consensus in Q2.
Servicing portfolio grew 11% year over year to $699.7 billion in unpaid principal balance.
PennyMac Financial Services (NYSE:PFSI), a top mortgage lender and servicer, released its second-quarter 2025 earnings on July 22, 2025. The company reported GAAP EPS of $2.54, underperforming the analyst estimate of $2.75 (GAAP). Revenue (GAAP) reached $444.7 million, well below the $553.8 million (GAAP) expected. Despite these shortfalls, the company expanded its servicing portfolio to $699.7 billion and increased book value per share to $78.04. The quarter was marked by strong origination and servicing volume, but profitability was pressured by higher expenses, margin compression, and unfavorable hedging results.
Metric | Q2 2025 | Q2 2025 Estimate | Q2 2024 | Y/Y Change |
---|---|---|---|---|
EPS (GAAP) | $2.54 | $2.75 | $1.85 | 37.3% |
Revenue (GAAP) | $444.7 million | $553.79 million | $406.1 million | 9.5% |
Pretax Income (GAAP) | $76.4 million | $133.9 million | (42.9%) | |
Book Value per Share | $78.04 | $71.76 | 8.8% | |
Servicing Portfolio UPB | $699.7 billion | $632.7 billion | 10.6% |
Source: PennyMac Financial. Note: Analyst estimates provided by FactSet.
PennyMac Financial Services operates as a major mortgage lender and servicer in the United States. It sources, originates, and processes home loans through retail, broker, and correspondent channels. After funding loans, it either sells the assets or retains the right to service them, which involves managing payments, customer support, and default management.
The business relies on two main revenue engines: mortgage production and loan servicing. Production focuses on generating volume through multiple origination channels. Servicing delivers recurring fees for managing existing loans efficiently. The company’s recent priorities include investing in technology for process automation, scaling its servicing platform, and maintaining compliance in a heavily regulated industry. Success hinges on loan volume, competitive pricing, technological efficiency, and robust risk controls.
The company’s mortgage production segment showed notable volume growth. Originations and acquisitions totaled $37.9 billion in unpaid principal balance, up 39 % from the second quarter of 2024 and 31% from the previous quarter. This volume drove a 13% sequential and 38% year-over-year revenue increase in the production business. Pretax income in production reached $57.8 million (GAAP), a 5 % increase from the second quarter of 2024, despite a slight sequential decline.
The servicing operation also scaled up, with the total portfolio reaching $699.7 billion in unpaid principal balance, an 11 % rise from June 30, 2024. However, with pretax income dropped 40 % from the second quarter of 2024 to $54.2 million. The decrease was primarily driven by increased realization of cash flows due to higher realized and expected prepayments, weighed down further by losses linked to mortgage servicing rights (MSR) hedges. Specifically, $15.9 million in MSR fair value gains were more than offset by $109.1 million in hedging losses, reducing pretax income by $93.2 million, or $1.30 per diluted share.
Technology investment was another standout theme. The company increased technology spending to $42.3 million, up from $35.7 million in Q2 2024. It accelerated its use of artificial intelligence in both loan origination and servicing operations. For example, AI-powered systems including the “Mac Chat” virtual assistant have saved thousands of staff hours and millions in costs by automating customer support and document processing. The leadership stated that these initiatives should yield future efficiency gains.
Total company expenses (GAAP) were $368.3 million, up 35% from Q2 2024. Compensation and loan origination costs contributed most to the increase, reflecting higher volumes and ongoing hiring. Interest expense also jumped to $239.6 million (GAAP), up 15% from Q2 2024 as the company took on more debt to fund servicing assets. Finally, the company’s net income (GAAP) benefited from a one-time tax benefit of $81.6 million due to changes in state-level tax rates, boosting bottom-line results for the quarter.
The quarterly dividend was held steady at $0.30 per share. This marks a 50 % increase compared to the second quarter of 2024’s $0.20, with no change from the first quarter of the year.
However, it indicated it expects to benefit from a lower effective tax rate, set at 25.2% compared to 26.7% previously.
Looking forward, the company plans to continue its technology investment to drive down costs and enhance service quality. It will focus on expanding both the production and servicing businesses and developing subservicing for third-party clients. The loan retention rate at PMT, a key partner, is set to decrease in the next quarter, which could affect the fee income mix. Investors should keep watch on expense trends, MSR hedge results, and the ongoing impact of technology initiatives on productivity and margins.
Revenue and net income presented using U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) unless otherwise noted.
When our analyst team has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, Stock Advisor’s total average return is 1,040%* — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 182% for the S&P 500.
They just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now, available when you join Stock Advisor.
See the stocks »
*Stock Advisor returns as of July 21, 2025
JesterAI is a Foolish AI, based on a variety of Large Language Models (LLMs) and proprietary Motley Fool systems. All articles published by JesterAI are reviewed by our editorial team, and The Motley Fool takes ultimate responsibility for the content of this article. JesterAI cannot own stocks and so it has no positions in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.