KBRA Affirms Ratings for Citizens & Northern Corporation
19 Feb 2026 | New York
KBRA affirms the senior unsecured debt rating of BBB, the subordinated debt rating of BBB-, and the short-term debt rating of K3 for Wellsboro, Pennsylvania-based Citizens & Northern Corporation (NASDAQ: CZNC) (“the company”). In addition, KBRA affirms the deposit and senior unsecured debt ratings of BBB+, the subordinated debt rating of BBB, and the short-term deposit and debt ratings of K2 for Citizens & Northern Bank ("the bank"), the lead subsidiary. The Outlook for all long-term ratings is Stable.
Key Credit Considerations
The ratings are supported by the company’s durable, branch-based deposit franchise, with a footprint largely concentrated in secondary Pennsylvania markets. CZNC maintains a stable noninterest-bearing deposit base representing a solid 21% of total deposits, supporting a lower-cost funding model, as reflected in deposit costs of 1.76% for 2025 compared to similarly rated peers at 2.21%. The recent acquisition of Susquehanna Community Financial, Inc. expanded the company’s footprint into the Lewisburg MSA, increasing market share and enhancing funding stability, with core deposits averaging 87% of total funding over the past five years. Excluding non-recurring items, core earnings have remained solid, evidenced by an ROA near 1% over the last five years (1.26% for FY25). Profitability is underpinned by an above-average NIM (five-year average of 3.57%), supported by an earning asset mix weighted toward higher-yielding loans, which represent 78% of average earning assets. Earnings also benefit from a diversified revenue stream, with noninterest income generally comprising 25% of total revenues, largely derived from stable trust and fee-based income. The ratings consider recent negative credit migration trends, as reflected in an elevated NPA ratio; however, the ratio remains within historical norms and is partially attributable to management’s conservative underwriting practices, which KBRA views favorably. Notwithstanding this migration, the company has historically demonstrated minimal credit losses, supported by proactive credit management and solid recourse protection, with the annual net charge-off ratio tracking below 0.30% since 2017. Despite a moderate decline following the transaction, capital management remains a ratings strength. The CET1 ratio of 12.2% as of 4Q25 slightly trails peers yet remains solid. Capital protection is supported by a relatively lower risk profile (RWA density of 77%) and a consistent track record of earnings generation above a 1.0% ROA. KBRA expects capital metrics to improve as management focuses on rebuilding capital post-merger through retained earnings and modest loan growth in 2026.
Rating Sensitivities
Additional scale in economically robust MSAs, continued diversification of earnings, sustained minimal loss content, and capital metrics above the rated peer group may lead to positive rating momentum over time. Conversely, unexpected deterioration in the funding profile that adversely affects the bank’s overall liquidity position, weakened profitability, outsized growth that materially pressures core capital, or elevated credit losses could result in rating pressure.
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