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NONINTEREST INCOME
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2025
Revenue from Contract with Customer [Abstract]  
NONINTEREST INCOME
3. NONINTEREST INCOME
Credit/debit card and ATM income
The following table presents the components of credit/debit card and ATM income:
Three Months Ended June 30,Six Months Ended June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)2025202420252024
Bailment fees$13,281 $18,819 $27,456 $33,783 
Interchange fees4,077 3,971 7,824 7,724 
Other card and ATM fees951 1,085 1,772 2,037 
Total credit/debit card and ATM income$18,309 $23,875 $37,052 $43,544 
Credit/debit card and ATM income is composed of bailment fees, interchange fees, and other card and ATM fees. Bailment fees are earned from bailment arrangements with clients. Bailment arrangements are legal relationships in which property is delivered to another party without a transfer of ownership. The party who transferred the property (the bailor) retains ownership interest of the property. In the event that the bailee files for bankruptcy protection, the property is not included in the bailee's assets. The bailee pays an agreed-upon fee for the use of the bailor's property in exchange for the bailor allowing use of the assets at the bailee's site. Bailment fees are earned from cash that is made available for clients' use at an offsite location, such as cash located in an ATM at a client's place of business. These fees are typically indexed to a market interest rate. This revenue stream generates fee income through monthly billing for bailment services.
Credit/debit card and ATM income also includes interchange fees. Interchange fees are paid by a merchant's bank to a bank that issued a debit or credit card used in a transaction to compensate the issuing bank for the value and benefit the merchant receives from accepting electronic payments. These revenue streams generate fee income at the time a transaction occurs and are recorded as revenue at the time of the transaction.
Investment management and fiduciary income
The following table presents the components of investment management and fiduciary income:
Three Months Ended June 30,Six Months Ended June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)2025202420252024
Trust fees$32,322 $26,143 $60,391 $48,004 
Wealth management and advisory fees11,452 11,463 22,664 22,530 
Total investment management and fiduciary income$43,774 $37,606 $83,055 $70,534 
Investment management and fiduciary income is composed of trust fees and wealth management and advisory fees. Trust fees are based on revenue earned from custody, escrow, trustee and trustee related services on structured finance transactions; indenture trustee, administrative agent, paying agent and collateral agent services to individuals, institutions and corporations; commercial domicile and independent director services; and investment and trustee services to families and individuals. Most fees are flat fees, except for a portion of personal and corporate trustee fees where the Company earns a percentage on the assets under management or assets held within a trust. This revenue stream primarily generates fee income through monthly, quarterly and annual billings for services provided.
Wealth management and advisory fees consists of fees from Bryn Mawr Trust®, BMTA (formerly BMCM), WSFS Wealth Management, LLC, and WSFS Wealth® Investments. Wealth management and advisory fees are based on revenue earned from services including asset management, financial planning, family office, and brokerage. The fees are based on the market value of assets, are assessed as a flat fee, or are brokerage commissions. This revenue stream primarily generates fee income through monthly, quarterly and annual billings for the services.
Deposit service charges
The following table presents the components of deposit service charges:
Three Months Ended June 30,Six Months Ended June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)2025202420252024
Service fees$4,642 $4,522 $9,248 $8,884 
Return and overdraft fees1,857 1,648 3,695 3,448 
Other deposit service fees303 326 612 651 
Total deposit service charges$6,802 $6,496 $13,555 $12,983 
Deposit service charges includes revenue earned from core deposit products, certificates of deposit, and brokered deposits. The Company generates fee revenues from deposit service charges primarily through service charges and overdraft fees. Service charges consist primarily of monthly account maintenance fees, treasury management fees, foreign ATM fees and other maintenance fees. All of these revenue streams generate fee income through service charges for monthly account maintenance and similar items, transfer fees, late fees, overlimit fees, and stop payment fees. Revenue is recorded at the time of the transaction.
Other income
The following table presents the components of other income:
Three Months Ended June 30,Six Months Ended June 30,
(Dollars in thousands)2025202420252024
Managed service fees$5,115 $5,861 $9,882 $11,447 
Currency preparation1,676 1,924 3,461 3,599 
ATM loss protection658 884 1,304 1,743 
Capital markets revenue1,915 3,378 3,593 6,379 
Miscellaneous products and services5,427 4,728 8,679 6,010 
Total other income$14,791 $16,775 $26,919 $29,178 
Other income consists of managed service fees, which are primarily courier fees related to cash management, currency preparation, ATM loss protection, Capital Markets revenue, and other miscellaneous products and services offered by the Bank. These fees are primarily generated through monthly billings or at the time of the transaction. Capital Markets revenue consists of fees related to interest rate swaps, risk participation agreements, foreign exchange contracts, letters of credit, and trade finance products and services offered by the Bank.
Arrangements with multiple performance obligations
The Company's contracts with clients may include multiple performance obligations. For such arrangements, the Company allocates revenue to each performance obligation based on its relative standalone selling price. The Company generally determines standalone selling prices based on the prices charged to clients.
Practical expedients and exemptions
The Company does not disclose the value of unsatisfied performance obligations for (i) contracts with an original expected length of one year or less and (ii) contracts for which the Company recognizes revenue at the amount to which it has the right to invoice for services performed.
See Note 14 for further information about the disaggregation of noninterest income by segment.