New York, June 5, 2026, 07:07 EDT
Riverview Bancorp held at $5.61 before the open Friday, matching its previous close. The stock remains just under its 52-week highs. Investors are watching the bank’s balance-sheet changes while the sector rallies.
Nasdaq’s main trading session in New York starts at 9:30 a.m. and ends at 4:00 p.m. Eastern, but regular trading was not open yet. Premarket action happens before the bell.
Regional banks gain as rates focus stays; futures dip before jobs data
Regional banks tracked the recent interest rate moves, with Friday’s tape mixed going into the U.S. payrolls report. U.S. stock futures edged down ahead of the jobs numbers, which could set the tone for Fed policy bets. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF rose 3.1%, while the iShares U.S. Regional Banks ETF added 3.7% at last check.
Riverview doesn’t see much trading. Robinhood puts the company’s market cap at about $116 million. The stock’s average volume is around 43,300 shares. Shares have traded between $4.74 and $5.85 in the past year.
The gain was small compared with other regional-bank names. Heritage Financial added 3.6%, Banner was up 2.7%, and Columbia Banking System rose 3.2% according to the latest market numbers.
Riverview, based in Vancouver, Washington, owns Riverview Bank and Riverview Trust Company. The company reports running 17 branches across Oregon and Washington, along with three lending centers. Its business covers commercial, business, and personal banking.
Riverview’s big move this year was the March 25 securities repositioning. The bank shifted its held-to-maturity portfolio into available-for-sale, then sold $149.3 million of lower-yielding bonds at what it estimates was an $11.4 million pretax loss. Riverview said the trade should lift net interest margin by around 25 basis points, or 0.25 percentage point, after the effect flows through. Net interest margin is the difference between returns on assets and the cost of funds.
Chief Executive Nicole Sherman called it a “prudent deployment of excess capital” and said it’s meant to boost margin and future earnings.
Riverview’s April numbers showed fourth-quarter net income of $656,000, or 3 cents a share, when leaving out a balance-sheet item. But the company had a net loss of $8.0 million, or 39 cents a share, on its reported results. Sherman said profitability was “positioned to improve.” CFO David Lam said the latest moves should “support margin improvement.” GlobeNewswire
Riverview also did some work on shareholder returns. The company paid a 2-cent quarterly dividend April 24. Tangible book value was $5.76 a share at the end of March. Riverview repurchased 130,059 shares in the quarter, paying an average $5.36 per share. The board cleared up to $4.0 million for buybacks back in January.
But the move isn’t all upside. Selling the securities locked in a real loss, and Riverview’s plan to earn it back now hangs on how quickly it can put that cash into higher-yielding assets or bring down its borrowings. Credit metrics got attention this quarter too: non-performing assets came in at 0.53% of total assets, with a $1.2 million provision for credit losses and $1.1 million in net charge-offs for the March period.
Riverview shares are set to move with the regional-bank crowd, following rates and jobs numbers. Investors are also watching how quickly Riverview’s margin fix can play out. The stock is thinly traded and small, so there’s little space for it to wander.