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HARTFORDBUSINESS.COM | FEBRUARY 23, 2026 21 FOCUS | BANKING & FINANCE Rival lenders target Webster customers as Santander deal unfolds Howard Brady is president and CEO of East Hartford-based American Eagle Financial Credit Union. Contributed Photo By Michael Puffer mpuffer@hartfordbusiness.com A s Spain-based Banco Santander moves forward with its planned $12.3 billion acquisition of Stamford-based Webster Financial Corp., competitors across Connecticut are positioning to capture portions of Webster's customer base. Within days of Santander's Feb. 3 acquisition announcement, Norwich- based Dime Bank began compiling a list of Webster and Santander customers whose checks were cashed or deposited at Dime locations, President Nicholas J. Statoulas said. After collecting roughly a month of transaction activity, the $1.2 billion bank, which operates branches in southeastern Connecticut and Greater Hartford, plans to contact those individuals with targeted outreach emphasizing its community-bank value proposition, Statoulas said. "We can do some targeted messaging that can go out to those individuals and say: 'Hey, are you fed up with all the changes that you're seeing in the marketplace? Why don't you give Dime Bank an opportunity,'" Statoulas said. "We're a mutual savings bank that doesn't have stockholders, so you don't have to worry about the merger-acquisi- tion dynamic there." Statoulas said the strategy is designed to be more efficient and cost-effective than broad marketing efforts across regions where Dime's footprint overlaps with Webster and Santander. Strengths and vulnerabilities Bank mergers create both opportuni- ties and risks for financial institutions, said John Carusone, president of the Bank Analysis Center in Hartford. While combining banks often gain expanded lending capacity and a broader suite of products, mergers also introduce periods of operational disruption that can unsettle customers, Carusone said. "It creates opportunity for smaller institutions to pull market share away through disaffected customers that don't want to deal with the perceived impersonableness of a behemoth bank, or who are convinced they'll get more flexible terms and faster responses from a smaller institution," Carusone said. "So, M&A transactions cut both ways. There are opportunities on both sides of the table." In addition to poaching customers, rival institutions often attempt to recruit employees from banks undergoing mergers, Carusone said, as workforce uncertainty can create openings. Santander has projected approxi- mately $800 million in cost savings Nicholas Statoulas Naugatuck-based Ion Bank, a $2.7 billion lender with 20 Connecticut branches and two in New Jersey, plans to increase its marketing budget in areas near Webster locations, President and CEO David Rotatori said. The timing will align with Webster's eventual rebranding and system conversion, he said. Howard Brady, president and CEO of East Hartford-based American Eagle Financial Credit Union, said prior bank mergers have produced notice- able membership gains for his insti- tution, particularly when customers experienced service disruptions. With Santander's pending purchase of Webster, American Eagle — a $2.6 billion institution with 16 branches in Connecticut and Massachusetts — is developing a marketing strategy that includes targeted social media adver- tising, community outreach and media appearances. Brady said the credit union's nonprofit structure and long- standing local presence may appeal to customers considering alternatives. "We have been here 90-plus years in our local community," Brady said. "We're a trusted resource. So, it's a mix of an active approach and also a passive approach knowing that we'd love to be an option for folks if the need arises." Continued consolidation The Webster-Santander combina- tion reflects a broader, decades-long consolidation trend in U.S. banking. When Carusone entered the industry in the early 1980s, there were roughly 15,000 commercial banks nation- wide. Today, that number has fallen to about 4,500 — a contraction of nearly 70% driven by mergers and institutional failures. "We're in the fourth quarter of the game in terms of consolidation," Carusone said. Consumer behavior has also shifted dramatically. An estimated 60% of banking transactions now occur through digital channels, diminishing the central role branches once played. Banks increasingly rely on hub-and- spoke models, consolidating full-ser- vice locations while maintaining smaller satellite offices supported by centralized operations. That evolution has reduced the structural advantage community banks once enjoyed through physical proximity alone, Carusone said, though he noted that personalized service retains value. "It's fast becoming a relic," he said of traditional branch-centric banking. "But it doesn't mean there isn't a place for personalized service." from the deal, saying the reductions will be achieved before 2028 through platform integration, consolidation of overlapping functions and econ- omies of scale. Carusone estimates that achieving those savings would require reductions equal to roughly 20% of the combined operating expenses of Webster and Santander's U.S. operations. "It's not impossible, but it is the banking equivalent of scaling Mount Everest," he said. Realizing those reductions, Carusone added, would likely require branch consolidation and back-office cuts — changes that can unsettle both customers and employees. Webster Financial employed 4,501 full-time equivalent workers and oper- ated 195 branches across four states as of September 2025, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. data. Santander reported 5,217 full-time equivalent U.S. employees and 373 branches spanning nine states. Both banks operate in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island, creating areas of geographic overlap. A Santander spokesperson told the Hartford Business Journal that no decisions have been made regarding specific branch locations and that oper- ations will remain unchanged until the deal is completed. The company has also emphasized its intention to retain Webster's Stamford headquarters as one of its corporate offices. "Santander sees value in the customer franchise and the complementary footprints of our branch networks," the spokesperson said. "Making sure we continue to serve customers seamlessly will be a top priority." 'Trusted resource' Other financial institutions are increasing their marketing efforts in response to the announced merger. David Rotatori WEBSTER BANK-SANTANDER BRANCH FOOTPRINTS NO. OF BRANCHES STATE SANTANDER WEBSTER BANK CONNECTICUT 13 95 MASSACHUSETTS 120 17 NEW YORK 59 76 RHODE ISLAND 19 7 DELAWARE 1 FLORIDA 2 NEW HAMPSHIRE 10 NEW JERSEY 86 PENNSYLVANIA 63 TOTALS 373 195 Source: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

