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Columbia Financial, Inc. CLBK Gains (Losses) On Write-down Of Other Real Estate

Gains (Losses) On Write-down Of Other Real Estate at other companies

WesBanco logo
WesBancoWSBC
$546K+1,465%
First Bancorp logo
First BancorpFBNC
$52K+189%
GBC
Glacier BancorpGBCI
$17K+194%
ServisFirst Bancshares logo
ServisFirst BancsharesSFBS
-$11K-103%
Burke & Herbert Financial Services Corp. logo
Burke & Herbert Financial Services Corp.BHRB
$0+100%
German American Bancorp logo
German American BancorpGABC
-$22K

Other financials

Income statement

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Revenue$67.1M+14.2%
Net income$13.1M+47.2%
EPS (diluted)$0.13+44.4%

Balance sheet

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Cash & equivalents$276.9M+8.1%
Total debt$1.3B+12.1%
Total equity$1.2B+6.7%
Total assets$11.0B+3.8%

Cash flow

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Operating cash flow$3.1M+299%
CapEx$1.9M-35.7%
Free cash flow$1.3M+128%

Valuation

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Market cap$2.07B+16.1%

Profitability

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Net margin21%+20.2pp
FCF margin24.1%+19.4pp

Returns & leverage

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Return on equity4.9%+4.8pp
Debt / equity1.1×+0.1×

Where this comes from

Reported directly by Columbia Financial, Inc. in its filing.

Tagged under the XBRL concept clbk:GainsLossesOnWriteDownOfOtherRealEstate.

The official record: Columbia Financial, Inc.’s 10-K, filed March 6, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

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Questions, answered.

What is Columbia Financial, Inc.'s gains (losses) on write-down of other real estate?
Columbia Financial, Inc. (CLBK) reported gains (losses) on write-down of other real estate of $0 in Q4 2025.
How has Columbia Financial, Inc.'s gains (losses) on write-down of other real estate changed year-over-year?
Columbia Financial, Inc.'s gains (losses) on write-down of other real estate increased by 100.0% year-over-year, from -$160K to $0.
What does gains (losses) on write-down of other real estate mean?
Captures the valuation adjustments or losses incurred when disposing of foreclosed properties or other real estate owned (OREO). This metric serves as a proxy for the quality of the loan portfolio and the effectiveness of the bank's credit risk management. High losses here often indicate underlying stress in the real estate lending segment.