- Bank OZK’s real estate exposure fell to 52% of its loan book in Q1 2026.
- Nonperforming assets doubled year-over-year, reaching 1.08% of the portfolio.
- Real estate loan originations hit a five-year low at $1B for the quarter.
- Repayments increased sharply to $1.6B, driven by elevated debt financing activity.
Real Estate Portfolio Shifts
Bank OZK, a major US construction lender, has continued to pull back its real estate lending. The bank’s real estate exposure dropped from 54% to 52% of its total loan portfolio in Q1 as it offloaded nonperforming assets, mainly from the office and life sciences sectors. Executives at Bank OZK signaled the trend will continue throughout 2026 as they prioritize managing risk.
Origination and Repayment Trends
Real estate loan originations declined to $1B in Q1, the slowest start to the year since 2021, as high material costs and cautious monetary policy restricted new deal flow. Meanwhile, repayments surged to $1.6B—an $850M year-over-year increase and a five-year high for the first quarter. Loan commitments dropped 11% over the past year, totaling $634M.
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Nonperforming Assets and Allowance Increases
Bank OZK saw its nonperforming assets double to 1.08% of the portfolio, attributed mainly to five loans totaling $409.5M. Two loans are currently up for sale, one is in negotiations, and two are being recapitalized. Charge-offs rose to 0.57%, more than doubling from the previous year, and the bank has boosted its credit loss reserves in anticipation of further defaults.
Competitive Landscape and Outlook
Strong competition for debt financing has slowed Bank OZK’s real estate originations. This comes despite plans to exceed $5B in 2026. The bank has also adjusted its approach by limiting loan sizes and preparing for further rate cuts, reflecting a more defensive lending stance. Meanwhile, large US banks are cutting nonperforming CRE loans. That shift is increasing repayments and limiting new loan growth. Bank OZK expects these pressures to continue as macro uncertainty and costs remain elevated.



