- What’s at stake: Huntington Bancshares is moving fast to achieve scale in Texas.
- Expert quote: “Our new Huntington footprint will expose us to a little more than half the U.S. population,” said Brant Standridge, Huntington’s president for consumer and regional banking. “It also happens to be the half that’s growing faster, in fact it’s projected to grow 30% faster.”
- Forward look: The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of 2026.
This is a breaking-news story. Please check back for updates.
Just a week after completing its acquisition of Dallas-based Veritex Holdings,
Cadence operates out of dual headquarters in Houston and Tupelo, Mississippi. The company’s footprint is sprawling, covering the Deep South, along with parts of Florida and other Southeast markets. Acquiring Cadence would move
Still, it’s Cadence’s Texas operations, with 110 branches and $16 billion of deposits, that
Monday’s deal would vault
“Our new
“It gives us immediate scale in two of the most significant markets, frankly, in the world, Dallas and Houston,” Standridge added. “We’ll have top-five share in those two markets.”
Chairman and CEO Steve Steinour called the acquisition “transformational.”
“To have a five-share in Dallas and Houston and eight across the state, we are exactly where the dynamic growth in Texas is occurring,” Steinour told American Banker. “We think we’ve got a really powerful economic engine in Texas and these other states that will propel [
“We only need [Office of the Comptroller of the Currency] approval,” Steinour said. “We’ll have the application filed next Monday.”
Monday’s announcement was preceded by about four months of extensive due diligence, Steinour said. A key turning point came July 1, when Cadence Chairman and CEO Dan Rollins spent the day meeting with
“Dan got a good initial feel,” Steinour said. “There’s a lot of trust and camaraderie [within] the executive team. All that came through, and the operating model came clearer to him.”
The $7.4 billion price tag works out to 1.7 times Cadence’s tangible book value per share.
“We have strong line of sight on the actions needed to ensure a smooth conversion and how we’ll drive significant success beyond that,” Steinour said on the conference call.