NEW YORK, May 29, 2026, 12:06 EDT
Orange County Bancorp shares edged lower in midday trading on Friday, lagging a firmer regional-bank group, as investors weighed a routine shareholder vote filing and looked ahead to next week’s dividend record date.
The stock was last quoted at $34.11, down 0.4%, with a market value of about $455 million and light volume of 10,540 shares. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF, an exchange-traded fund that tracks a basket of regional-bank shares, rose 0.4%; NBT Bancorp was little changed and OceanFirst Financial gained 0.4%.
The timing matters. Orange County Bancorp, parent of Orange Bank & Trust Company and Orange Investment Advisors, declared a $0.18-per-share cash dividend on May 22. It is payable June 15 to holders of record on June 4, the cut-off date for investors entitled to receive the payment.
At Friday’s quoted price, that quarterly payout implies an annualized yield of roughly 2.1%, assuming the rate is maintained. That is not a large move maker on its own, but for a lightly traded community-bank stock it can pull in income-focused buyers around the record date.
The most recent company filing was not a shock. Orange County Bancorp said in a May 27 Form 8-K that shareholders approved all proposals at the May 26 annual meeting, including the election of Michael J. Gilfeather, Marianna R. Kennedy and Richard B. Rowley as directors, and the ratification of Crowe LLP as independent auditor for 2026.
The bigger investor debate remains the first-quarter print. The company reported April 28 that net income rose 29.6% to $11.3 million, or 85 cents a share, while deposits increased 1.7% to $2.4 billion. Net interest margin — the spread between what a bank earns on loans and securities and what it pays for funding — widened to 4.40% from 3.95% a year earlier.
Gilfeather, the company’s president and chief executive, said the quarter was led by “low-cost deposit” growth and “continued strength” in net interest margin. He also said the bank stayed profitable despite a tougher macro and geopolitical backdrop. GlobeNewswire
That is the bull case in plain terms: deposits grew, funding costs eased, and lending income held up. Loans were roughly flat near $2.0 billion, so the earnings gain was more about margin and funding mix than a surge in balance-sheet growth.
But the credit line bears watching. In its quarterly filing, Orange County Bancorp said non-performing loans — loans where repayment is in doubt or no longer producing normal interest income — rose to $26.1 million at March 31 from $11.1 million at year-end. Most were tied to commercial real estate, including a $14.3 million senior-living facility participation loan that had payment disruption during the quarter.
Wealth management also softened. The company said assets under management or administration fell to $1.6 billion from $1.7 billion a year earlier, and wealth-management income slipped 5.0% to $3.3 million, mainly on lower asset levels and equity-market pressure.
The risk for the stock is that a clean margin story gets crowded out by credit costs. If commercial real estate stress widens, or if deposit competition pushes funding costs back up, the benefit from a better spread could fade quickly.
For now, OBT is trading like a quiet small-bank name with a dividend date near and no fresh operating surprise. The next real test is less the June payment than whether credit quality steadies before the company reports its next quarter.