Company: NWBI
Filing Date: 2025-02-25
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001471265-25-000016
Chunk: 44

Company: Northwest Bancshares, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-02-25
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 44
---
 impose nondiscriminatory lending requirements on financial institutions. The DOJ and other federal agencies are responsible for enforcing these laws and regulations. A successful regulatory challenge to an institution’s performance under the CRA or fair lending laws and regulations could result in a wide variety of sanctions, including the required payment of damages and civil money penalties, injunctive relief, restrictions on mergers and acquisitions activity, restrictions on expansion and restrictions on entering new business lines. Private parties may also have the ability to challenge an institution’s performance under fair lending laws in private class action litigation. Such actions could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

We could become subject to more stringent capital requirements, which could adversely impact our return on equity, require us to raise additional capital, or constrain us from paying dividends or repurchasing shares.

Federal regulations establish minimum capital requirements for bank holding companies and insured depository institutions, including minimum risk-based capital and leverage ratios. Unrealized gains and losses on certain “available-for-sale” securities holdings are to be included for purposes of calculating regulatory capital requirements unless a one-time opt-out was exercised, which we exercised. The regulations also establish a “capital conservation buffer” of 2.5%. An institution will be subject to limitations on paying dividends, engaging in share repurchases, and paying discretionary bonuses if its capital level falls below the 2.5% capital conservation buffer. The primary source of funds for the Company is dividends from Northwest Bank, which is also subject these obligations to maintain sufficient capital and by other restrictions on its dividends under federal and Pennsylvania law.

From time to time, the regulators implement changes to these regulatory capital requirements. The application of more stringent capital requirements could, among other things, result in lower returns on equity, require the raising of additional capital, and result in regulatory actions if we were to be unable to comply with such requirements. Changes to applicable capital requirements, including to asset risk weightings for risk-based capital calculations, items included or deducted in calculating regulatory capital and/or capital buffers, could result in management modifying its business strategy, and could limit our ability to make distributions, including paying out dividends or buying back shares. Furthermore, changes to the Basel III capital rules, including the implementation of Basel III endgame, that apply to banking organizations that are larger or more internationally active than the Company and Northwest may be informally applied or considered by the Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC in their regulation, supervision and examination of, and indirectly adversely impact, smaller institutions such as the Company and the