- Key insight: Community Financial has agreed to pay $40 million to acquire ClearPoint Federal in Batesville, Indiana.
- What’s at stake: ClearPoint is a rare bank that has built its business around funeral planning.
- Supporting data: The selling bank reported a return on assets of 2.31% through Sept. 30, 2025, well above the industry average.
Community Financial System in Syracuse, New York, has agreed to pay $40 million in cash for ClearPoint Federal Bank & Trust, a small bank that’s laser-focused on serving individuals seeking to set aside cash for end-of-life expenses.
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Community Financial, the parent company of Community Bank, declined an interview request on Thursday. The $17 billion-asset company indicated in a press release that it plans to merge the $131.5 million-asset ClearPoint into its wealth management subsidiary, Nottingham Financial Group.
“We look forward to welcoming ClearPoint’s clients and its talented team to Community Bank and are committed to ensuring a smooth transition,” Community Financial said in a statement to American Banker. It expects to close the deal in the second quarter.
Daniel Cardenas, who covers Community Financial for Janney Montgomery Scott, termed the ClearPoint acquisition “a nice bolt-on transaction.” In a research note, he said the deal meshes well with the buyer’s capital-deployment strategy, “which calls for investments into durable and growing revenue streams.”
End-of-life financial planning is typically accomplished either through a trust, managed by a financial services institution, or a special-purpose bank account.
A number of banks provide end-of-life planning help to customers, but few have made the niche their sole area of focus, as ClearPoint has. That said, the Batesville, Indiana-based company’s strategy appears to be working.
ClearPoint has reported a steady increase in revenue, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. statistics, from $7.9 million in 2021 to $9.8 million in 2024. The company has $112 million of deposits and $1.5 billion of assets under management, according to Community Financial.
Through the first three quarters of 2025, ClearPoint reported $7.9 million of revenue, with the majority recognized as noninterest income. The bank reported net income totaling $2.2 million through Sept. 30 with a return on assets of 2.31%. U.S. commercial banks had an average return on assets of 1.27% in the third quarter of 2025, according to FDIC data.
Community Financial indicated in an investor presentation that fee income would constitute 38.7% of its total revenue once the deal closes, compared with 38.3% currently.
ClearPoint says on its website that it was founded in 1998 as Forethought Federal Savings Bank, and that it serves customers in 43 states and the District of Columbia. It partners with funeral homes and cemeteries to offer trusts to consumers.
The deal comes nearly seven months after Community Financial agreed to pay approximately $48 million in cash to the $97.7 billion-asset Santander Bank for seven branches in the Allentown, Pennsylvania, area. The branch acquisition, completed in November, gave Community a total of 12 branches in the region, and it added about $553 million of deposits.
In September, Community Financial announced that it
In a research note published Tuesday, shortly before the ClearPoint transaction was announced, Janney’s Cardenas wrote that Community Financial was “well-positioned for steady future balance-sheet and EPS growth.”
“Overall, we view [Community Financial] as a sound fundamental performer able to treat investors to better-than-peer performance metrics underscored by sound credit quality, improving capital levels, and a diversified business model that produces outsized levels of fee income,” Cardenas wrote.
During the third quarter, Community Financial reported net income totaling $55.1 million, up about 25% from the third quarter of 2024. Its return on assets was 1.30%.
