Other

Interest Income (Expense), after Provision for Loan Loss

Sachem Capital Corp. Interest Income (Expense), after Provision for Loan Loss decreased by 167.7% to -$1.82M in Q1 2026 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric declined by 167.7%, from $2.69M to -$1.82M. This decline may warrant attention — for this metric, higher values are generally preferred.

Analysis

StatementIncome Statement
SectionOther
CategoryProfitability
SignalHigher is better
VolatilityModerate
First reportedQ1 2024
Last reportedQ1 2026May 20, 2026

How to read this metric

An increase suggests improved net interest margins or lower credit risk, while a decrease indicates compressed margins or rising credit quality concerns.

Detailed definition

This metric represents the net interest income generated by a financial institution after accounting for both interest e...

Peer comparison

Standard across all commercial banks as a primary indicator of core lending profitability.

Metric ID: other_interest_income_expense_after_provision_for_loan_loss

Historical Data

6 periods
 Q1 '24Q2 '24Q3 '24Q4 '24Q1 '25Q1 '26
Value-$8.32M-$8.32M-$8.32M-$8.32M$2.69M-$1.82M
QoQ Change+0.0%+0.0%+0.0%+132.3%-167.7%
YoY Change+132.3%-167.7%
Range-$8.32M$2.69M
CAGR-70.4%
Avg YoY Growth-17.7%
Median YoY Growth-17.7%

Interest Income (Expense), after Provision for Loan Loss at Other Companies

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Sachem Capital Corp.'s interest income (expense), after provision for loan loss?
Sachem Capital Corp. (SACH) reported interest income (expense), after provision for loan loss of -$1.82M in Q1 2026.
How has Sachem Capital Corp.'s interest income (expense), after provision for loan loss changed year-over-year?
Sachem Capital Corp.'s interest income (expense), after provision for loan loss decreased by 167.7% year-over-year, from $2.69M to -$1.82M.
What does interest income (expense), after provision for loan loss mean?
The net interest profit remaining after paying interest on liabilities and setting aside funds for potential loan losses.