Free Writing Prospectus
Investor Presentation:
Common Stock Offering
NASDAQ: NBN
May 2012
Filed
Pursuant
to
Rule
433
Registration
No.
333-180215
Issuer
Free
Writing
Prospectus
dated
May
3,
2012
Relating
to
Preliminary
Prospectus
dated
May
3,
2012


2
Safe
Harbor
Regarding
Forward-Looking
Statements
DISCLAIMER
Free
Writing
Prospectus
Statement
This presentation contains certain “forward-looking statements” about Northeast Bancorp (the “Company”) within the meaning of Section 27A of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, such as statements relating to use of proceeds
including the redemption of Series A preferred stock. Forward-looking statements, which are based on various assumptions (some of which are beyond
the Company’s control), may be identified by reference to a future period or periods, or by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “believe,”
“expect,” “estimate,” “anticipate,” “continue,” “plan,” “approximately,” “intend,” “objective,” “goal,” “project,” or other similar terms or variations on
those terms, or the future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “may,” “should,” “could,” and “would.” Actual results could differ materially from those
expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements as a result of, among other factors, the factors referenced in the Registration Statement
under the heading “Risk Factors”; changes in interest rates and real estate values; competitive pressures from other financial institutions; the effects of
a continuing deterioration in general economic conditions on a national basis or in the local markets in which the Company operates, including changes
which adversely affect borrowers' ability to service and repay the Company’s loans; changes in loan defaults and charge-off rates; changes in the value
of securities and other assets, adequacy of loan loss reserves, or deposit levels necessitating increased borrowing to fund loans and investments;
increasing government regulation, such as the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010; changes in the rules of
participation for the TARP Capital Purchase Program promulgated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury under the Emergency Economic Stabilization
Act of 2008, which may be changed unilaterally and restrictively by legislative or regulatory actions; establishment of a consumer financial protection
bureau with the broad authority to implement new consumer protection regulations; the risk that the Company may not be successful in the
implementation of its business strategy; and changes in assumptions used in making such forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made. The Company does not undertake any obligation to update any
forward-looking statement to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date the forward-looking statements are made.
The Company has filed a registration statement (including a prospectus) with the SEC (File No. 333-180215) for the offering to which this
communication relates.  Before you invest, you should read the prospectus in that registration statement and other documents that the Company has
filed with the SEC for more complete information about the Company and the offering.  You may obtain these documents without charge by visiting
EDGAR on the SEC website at www.sec.gov.  Alternatively, copies of the prospectus relating to the offering may be obtained from Sandler O'Neill +
Partners, L.P., 1251 Avenue of the Americas, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10020, (866) 805-4128.


3
Offering Summary
Issuer:
Ticker/Exchange:
Offering:
Type of Security:
Primary Shares to be Issued by NBN:
Secondary Shares to be Sold by R3 FHB Master, L.P. :
Total Shares:
Over-Allotment Option:
Northeast Bancorp (the “Company”)
NBN / NASDAQ Global Market
Follow-on Public Offering
Primary and Secondary Shares of Voting and Non-Voting¹
Common Stock
4,760,000 Shares
149,952 Shares
4,909,952 Shares
15%
Sole Book-Running Manager:                
Sandler O’Neill + Partners, L.P.
Use of Proceeds:
The Company intends to contribute the net proceeds to the capital of Northeast
Bank, where it is expected to be used for general corporate purposes, including
leveraging Northeast Bank’s balance sheet to allow for loan purchases, organic
loan growth and investment in securities.
The Company, subject to regulatory approval
²
, also intends to use a portion of the
net proceeds to redeem some or all of the outstanding shares of Series A
preferred stock issued to the U.S. Treasury under the TARP Capital Purchase
Program.
The Company will not receive any proceeds from the sale of shares of common
stock by the selling shareholder.
(1)
Certain investors may elect or be obligated to hold shares of non-voting common stock under the Company’s articles of incorporation
(2)
The Company
must
establish,
to
its
regulators’
satisfaction,
that
it
has
met
all
of
the
conditions
to
repurchase
and
must
obtain
the
approval
of
the
Federal
Reserve,
which
it
has not
yet
sought;
if
the
Company
does
redeem
all
of
the
Series
A
preferred
stock,
it
may
also
negotiate
a
repurchase
of
the
TARP
warrant


4
Former members of FHB Formation LLC own
approximately 60% of Company’s
outstanding common stock
FHB Formation LLC Merger Into Northeast Bancorp
FHB Formation LLC
Management team with an established track
record in the loan acquisition business
(Capital Crossing Bank)
Northeast Bancorp
Established in 1872 in Maine
Seasoned community bank                   
management team
Merged
December 29,
2010


5
Executive Summary
In December 2010, an investment group acquired a majority stake in Northeast
Bancorp and implemented a new business plan focused on purchasing commercial
loans
New management team consists of seasoned professionals with an established track
record of success and time together in the loan acquisition business
Newly-installed board of directors is committed to executing the business plan
Loan Acquisition and Servicing Group has in-house capabilities for all aspects of
secondary loan market acquisitions and management, and is uniquely positioned to
acquire performing loans at attractive risk-adjusted returns
Funding
for
growth
available
from
opportunities
within
Community
Bank's
branch
footprint, with additional potential from the recently-launched ableBanking online
affinity deposit platform
The Company has made significant investments in infrastructure and personnel to
support growth plans


6
Claire Bean
Chief Financial Officer & Chief
Operating Officer
Heather Campion
Chief Administrative Officer
Richard Wayne
President & Chief Executive Officer
Experienced Management Team
Co-founded Capital Crossing Bank in 1988
Served as President and Co-Chief Executive Officer of Capital Crossing Bank from 1991 until
sale in February 2007
Capital Crossing Bank was a national leader in the purchase and management of commercial
loans
25-year record in financial services in the Greater Boston area -
Benjamin Franklin
Bancorp , Grove Bank and Lighthouse Bank (internet bank)
Experience focused on balance sheet management, strategic planning, financial
management, commercial credit oversight, operations and information technology
Former Group Executive Vice President and Director of Corporate Affairs at Citizens
Financial Group, Inc.
Extensive background at leading institutions in both the public and private sectors,
including Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government


7
Experienced Management Team
Blackwell ("Bojay") Taylor
Managing Director
Patrick Dignan
Chief Credit Officer
Christopher Hickey
Managing Director
Justin Wahls
Managing Director
Focuses on sourcing and underwriting loan
acquisition and servicing opportunities
Former Vice President at CarVal Investors
David Ellingrud
Managing Director
James Krumsiek, Esq
Managing Director
Jim Delamater
President & Chief Executive Officer
Marcel Blais
Chief Operating Officer
Served as President and CEO of the Company
and Northeast Bank from 1981 to December
2010
Long active in Maine civic and community
organizations
Pender Lazenby
Chief Risk Officer
Former senior officer at FleetBoston,
BankBoston, and Casco Northern Bank,
specializing in corporate lending, risk
management and finance
Loan Acquisition & Servicing Group
Risk Management
Community Banking Division
Responsible for the retail banking, loan 
administration and operational departments 
of the Community Banking Division
Formerly with Casco Northern Bank and 
Bank of Boston
Focuses on sourcing and underwriting 
loan acquisition and servicing 
opportunities in the LASG
Former Director at CarVal Investors
Manages all underwriting and due diligence
activities for the LASG
Former Senior Vice President and Director 
of Real Estate at Capital Crossing Bank
Oversees all aspects of the Company’s 
commercial and managed loan 
portfolios nationwide
Former Senior Vice President and Director 
of Asset Management at Capital 
Crossing Bank
Oversees all legal aspects of the LASG
Former VP, Legal Counsel at Capital 
Crossing Bank and Partner at 
Riemer & Braunstein, LLP
Evaluates loan purchasing opportunities 
and manages all aspects of the loan 
purchasing transaction process
Former Senior Vice President and Director 
of Investment Strategy and Analytics 
at Capital Crossing Bank


8
Robert Glauber,
Chairman
Committed Board of Directors
Matthew
Botein
Cheryl
Dorsey
Peter
McClean
John
Orestis
Adam
Shapiro
David
Tanner
Judith E.
Wallingford
Richard
Wayne
Chairman of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 2010
Lecturer at Harvard University’s Kennedy
School of Government
Served as Chairman and CEO of NASD (now
FINRA), 2001 to 2006; as Under Secretary of
the Treasury, 1989-1992
Served on many boards, including the Board 
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Director of the Company and Northeast Bank
since 2010
Managing Director at BlackRock, Inc.;
currently heads its BlackRock Alternative
Investors unit
Previously a Managing Director at Highfields
Capital Management
Director of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 2010
President of Echoing Green since 2002
Director of the Company and Northeast Bank
since 2010
Managing Director of Gulfstream Advisors
LLC since 2004
Director of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 2007
Owner of Schooner Estates Retirement
Community as well as Chief Executive
Officer of North Country Associates
Former mayor of the city of Lewiston, ME
Director of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 2010
Partner and co-founder of East Rock
Capital, LLC
Previously a Vice President in the Special
Situations Group at Goldman Sachs
Director of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 2010
Managing Director and member of the
Investment Committee of Arlon Group
LLC
Director of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 1994
President of The Maine Water Company
Certified management accountant
Director of the Company and Northeast
Bank since 2010
President & Chief Executive Officer of the
Company and Northeast Bank


9
Significant Insider and Institutional Investment in the Company
Non-Voting
Total
Investors
Voting Shares
Voting (%)
Shares
Shares
Total (%)
All Directors and Executive Officers
322,636
9.74%
0
322,636
9.20%
New Investors ¹
Arlon Capital Partners II LP
317,286
9.58%
0
317,286
9.04%
Highfields Capital Management LP
317,286
9.58%
0
317,286
9.04%
East Rock Capital, LLC
287,150
8.67%
0
287,150
8.19%
R3 FHB Master, L.P.²
114,846
3.47%
35,106
149,952
4.28%
Other New Investors³
635,854
19.20%
160,245
796,099
22.70%
New Investor Totals
1,672,422
50.50%
195,351
1,867,773
53.25%
Other Investors
1,317,115
39.76%
0
1,317,115
37.55%
Total - All Shareholders
3,312,173
100.00%
195,351
3,507,524
100.00%
(1)
New investors were members of FHB Formation LLC prior to its merger with Northeast Bancorp in 2010.  Included in “All Directors and Executive Officers” are
additional New Investors holding shares of voting common stock aggregating 231,326, or 6.60% of total shares.
(2)
Intends to be a selling shareholder
(3)
Includes certain other private investment funds and institutions, management, and individuals
Note: Ownership as of March 7, 2012


10
Loan Acquisition & Servicing Group (“LASG”) Overview
Target Loan             
Profile
Transaction
Sourcing
LASG Team
Team of credit analysts, real estate
analysts, servicing specialists and legal
counsel with extensive experience in
the loan acquisition business
The LASG team has an average of over
14 years of experience in the loan
purchasing business
Four Managing Directors worked with
Richard Wayne at Capital Crossing
Bank
All loans serviced by in-house team of
experienced asset managers
Variety of sellers: banks, insurance
companies, investment funds and
government agencies
The LASG competes primarily with
limited number of community banks,
regional banks and private equity
funds
Aggregate annual volume of loans
tracked by the LASG ranged from $9
billion to $20 billion for 2009-2011
Recent economic crisis has led to a
high level of trading volume
Market expected to remain active in
times of economic prosperity as sellers
have additional reserve capacity to sell
unwanted and troubled assets
Performing commercial loans secured
by real estate or other business assets
located throughout the country
Seek to build portfolio that is diverse
with respect to geography, loan type
and collateral type
Focus primarily on loans with balances
between $1 and $3 million
Through April 30, 2012, purchased
loans for an aggregate investment of
$75.1 million with unpaid principal
balance (UPB) of $91.7 million


11
LASG Portfolio Screening Process
Seller Screening
Portfolio
Screening
Understand Price
Expectations
Loan Level Triage
Portfolio
Stratification &
Yield Analysis
Decision Point
Understand sale
dynamics
Determine
whether seller
has capital or
reserves to
absorb sale-
related write
downs
Review prior
experience with
seller
Review recent
experience with
advisor, if
relevant
Assess quality of
information
available
Review data tape
to determine
which pools
and/or loans are
worth analyzing
further
Identify pool-
level reserves
and pricing
expectations
Determine
whether
portfolio is likely
to trade in pools
or on an all-or-
none basis
Identify likely
competition
Complete
preliminary real
estate valuation
work and high-
level credit work
to identify any
red flags
Analyze deeper
where necessary
Stratify portfolio
by performance,
geography,
collateral type,
vintage, etc.
Develop
preliminary loan-
level pricing
Determine 
whether or not
to proceed to full
underwriting
1,000 loans
$1.4B UPB
93 loans
$135MM UPB
2011 Activity
Loans Reviewed
Loans Bid


12
LASG Asset-Level Underwriting Process
Credit review
Financial analysis
Real estate valuation
Legal documentation
review
Borrower/guarantor
research
Local market research
Environmental analysis
Property inspection
Note terms
Performance status
Borrower/guarantor
strength
Collateral strength
Legal issues
Expected yield
Geographic location
Servicing restrictions, if
any
Cash flow budget
prepared for each asset
Specific upside and
downside scenarios
identified
Sensitivities tested at
various price points
All elements fully
documented in
underwriting package
Distributed
approximately 2-3 days
before bid to LASG
Credit Committee
2011 Activity
Loans Bid
Loans Acquired¹
(1)
Through April 30, 2012, LASG has acquired loans with total UPB of $92 million
Underwriting Components
Pricing Factors
Cash Flow Modeling
Underwriting Package
93 loans
$135MM UPB
64 loans
$64MM UPB


13
LASG Purchased Loan Book –
Return Through Nine Months of FY’12 ¹
Three components drive return:
-
Regularly scheduled interest and
accretion
-
Gain on loan sales
-
Accelerated accretion and fees
recognized on loan payoffs
We often achieve results in excess
of our targeted yields when a loan
is prepaid
Regularly Scheduled Interest & Accretion
10.78%
Gain on Loan Sales
0.99%
Accelerated Accretion & Fees Recognized
on Loan Payoffs
3.43%
Total²
15.20%
(1)
Return
on
purchased
loans
represents
interest
and
noninterest
income
recorded
during
the
period
divided
by
the
average
purchased
loan
balance,
on
an
annualized basis
(2)
Yield excluding gain on sales is 14.21%


14
Investment Size
Average
investment was
$766,000/loan
Largest purchased
investment was
$5.5 million
Collateral Type
Diverse collateral
types focused
primarily in four
major sectors:
retail, industrial,
mixed use and
multifamily
Collateral State
Geographically
diverse with
collateral in 16
different states
CA, NY and FL
represent
combined 46% of
portfolio
Purchase Price
Weighted average
purchase price of
80.9%
3% of portfolio
acquired for less
than 60%
(1)
Based on the composition of the Company’s purchased loans through March 31, 2012 by initial investment
LASG
-
Summary
Purchased
Loan
Portfolio
Statistics
¹


15
LASG –
Purchased Loan Credit Quality
Purchased Loan Book Delinquency¹
(1)
Based on investment amount at March 31, 2012
Total investment amount of $56.9 million
at March 31, 2012
2 loans totaling $1.0 million are more
than 30 days delinquent
No loans more than 59 days delinquent
No nonperforming loans


16
Community Banking Division: Overview
Ten branches, four investment centers and
three mortgage loan production offices (LPOs)
located in south central and western Maine
Diverse loan mix with stable credit profile
Expanded residential mortgage group with
broader geographic focus
Sold insurance division in 2011
At March 31, 2012
Locations
Maine
New
Hampshire
Portland
Portsmouth


17
Loan and Deposit Mix
Total Loans
$345.8 Million
Total Deposits
$403.7 Million
(1)
Core deposits are defined as non-maturity deposits and non-brokered insured time deposits
Financial data at March 31, 2012
1.50% NPLs/loans
Largest originated loan $3.7 million and largest
purchased loan $5.5 million (invested dollars)
Average originated CRE loan size of $253
thousand and average purchased loan investment
size of $780 thousand
Purchased loan yield of 14.21% for the nine
months ended March 31, 2012, compared to
5.99% for originated loans
Core deposits¹
of $396.4 million, or 98.2% of total
deposits
Cost of interest-bearing deposits of 0.96%  for the
nine months ended March 31, 2012
aBleBanking deposits of $1.1 million
Stable Core Deposit Base
Diversified Loan Portfolio


18
Funding
(1)
Core deposits are defined as non-maturity deposits and non-brokered insured time deposits
(2)
NBN’s market includes the following Maine counties: Androscoggin, Cumberland, Kennebec and Oxford
The purchase and origination of loans is
funded 100% by core deposits¹
which totaled
$396 million at March 31, 2012
98.2% of total deposits
The Community Banking Division, which
consists of ten branches in south central and
western Maine, is the primary source of core
deposit funding
The pilot of ableBanking, an online affinity
deposit program, was launched in March 2012
to provide an additional source of core
deposit funding
2011 Maine Deposit Universe
($ millions)
Total Maine Bank Deposits
$30,694.1
Portland, ME Bank Deposits
$11,582.7
Deposits
% of
Top 10 Banks in NBN's Market²
in Market
Market
By 2011 Deposits
($ millions)
Share
Toronto-Dominion Bank
$11,272.8
59.79%
KeyCorp
$1,614.4
8.56%
Bank of America Corp.
$1,125.7
5.97%
Norway Bancorp MHC
$666.9
3.54%
Gorham Bancorp MHC
$627.3
3.33%
Kennebec Savings Bank
$524.0
2.78%
Androscoggin Bancorp MHC
$500.2
2.65%
Camden National Corp.
$408.6
2.17%
Northeast Bancorp
$402.2
2.13%
SBM Financial Inc.
$368.6
1.96%
Deposits as of June 30, 2011
Source: FDIC


Financial Data


20
Summary Overview
(1)
Financial data at March 31, 2012; dollars in millions, other than per share amounts
(2)
See Appendix for a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures
(3)
At March 31, 2012
(4)
At May 2, 2012
Financial Overview¹
Corporate Overview
Total Assets
$595.0
Total Loans
$345.8
Total Deposits
$403.7
Total Common Equity
$60.6
Tangible Book Value per Share ²
$15.94
Tangible Common Equity / Tangible Assets ²
9.47%
Tier 1 Leverage Ratio
11.85%
Tier 1 Risk-based Capital Ratio
19.28%
Total Risk-based Capital Ratio
19.49%
Nonperforming Assets / Total Assets
1.02%
Nonperforming Loans / Total Loans
1.50%
TARP Preferred Stock
$4.2
TARP Warrants
          Underlying Shares of Common Stock
67,958
          Exercise Price
$9.33
Bank Headquarters
Lewiston, ME
Corporate Offices
Lewiston, ME
Boston, MA
Charter / Primary Regulators                          
State of Maine
Federal Reserve
Composition
of
Shares
Outstanding
3
Voting Shares
3,312,173
Non-Voting Shares
195,351
Total Shares Outstanding
3,507,524
Current Market Data
4
Current Stock Price
$10.19
Market Capitalization
$35.7
Price / Tangible Book Value
64%
Annual Dividend
$0.36
Current Dividend Yield
3.53%


Balance Sheet Overview
Total Assets
Total Loans
Total Deposits
Total Common Equity²
(1)
Core deposits are defined as non-maturity deposits and non-brokered insured time deposits
(2)
As a result of the sale of Northeast Bank Insurance Group, Inc. in August 2011, tangible equity increased by approximately $8.4 million
$346
$310
21
$382
$309
$289
$1
$57
$200
$250
$300
$350
$400
06/30/2010
06/30/2011
03/31/12
Originated
Purchased
$51
$61
$61
$15.19
$13.58
$15.94
$10.00
$12.00
$14.00
$16.00
$18.00
$35
$40
$45
$50
$55
$60
$65
$70
06/30/2010
06/30/2011
03/31/12
$623
$596
$595
$500
$550
$600
$650
06/30/2010
06/30/2011
03/31/12
$287
$373
$396
$97
$28
$7
$384
$401
$404
74.6%
92.9%
98.2%
$0
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
06/30/2010
06/30/2011
03/31/12
Core Deposits¹
Other Deposits


22
Online Affinity Deposit Program: ableBanking Pilot
Build a brand, attract customers and cost-
effectively obtain core deposits
Online
affinity
deposit
program
-
designed
to allow customers to designate bank
marketing funds to any 501(c)(3) charity
$25.00 when a new customer opens a
savings or time deposit account
Thereafter, 25 bps of average annual
deposit balance (remitted annually)
As part of ableBanking pilot, the Company
has formed partnerships with non-profit
organizations in the Boston area to
highlight needs of the community
Boston-based pilot expected to continue
for approximately six months


23
Asset Quality Metrics
NPAs / Total Assets & NPLs / Total Loans
Allowance for Loan Losses / Gross Loans
Classified Loans³
NCOs / Average Loans
(1)
Regional peers include all public banks and thrifts in New England with assets between $300 million and $1 billion, as of December 31, 2011
(2)
Nationwide peers include all public banks and thrifts with assets between $500 million and $700 million
(3)
Classified loans includes commercial real estate, commercial business, and construction loans risk rated under the Company’s internal loan rating system
(4)
Calculated as net charge-offs divided by average loans for the previous 12 months. 6/30/11 ratio represents annualized experience after the merger on 12/29/10.
(5)
Excludes $751 thousand of accruing loans over 90 days past due that were well secured and in the process of collection
0.47%
0.16%
0.17%
0.35%
1.15%
0.00%
0.25%
0.50%
0.75%
1.00%
1.25%
1.50%
6/30/10
6/30/11
3/31/12
Regional
Peers ¹
Nationwide
Peers ²
1.52%
0.14%
0.22%
1.37%
2.03%
0.00%
0.50%
1.00%
1.50%
2.00%
2.50%
6/30/10
6/30/11
3/31/12
Regional
Peers ¹
Nationwide
Peers ²
Decrease reflects
reversal of ALL
through purchase
accounting.
$17.2
$10.1
$5.3
$0.0
$5.0
$10.0
$15.0
$20.0
$25.0
6/30/10
6/30/11
3/31/12
1.63%
1.32%
1.02%
2.16%
4.64%
2.31%
2.33%
1.50%
3.03%
5.35%
0.00%
1.00%
2.00%
3.00%
4.00%
5.00%
6.00%
6/30/10
6/30/11
3/31/12
Regional
Peers ¹
Nationwide
Peers ²
NPAs/Assets
NPLs/Loans
5
5
4


24
Profitability
Substantial investments have been
made in staffing, new software, and
hardware
Current infrastructure has significant
capacity for growth
The yield on purchased loans is
meaningfully above that for loans
originated by the Community Bank
Growth in purchased loans and
leveraging of current expense
structure positions the Company for
an increase in profitability
Yield on Loans¹
5.99%
14.21%
6.71%
0.00%
4.00%
8.00%
12.00%
16.00%
Originated Loan Yield
Purchased Loan Yield
Total Yield
(1)
Yield fiscal year to date through March 31, 2012


25
Pro Forma Capital Ratios
(1)
Assumes $48.3 million of net proceeds and 20% risk-weighting of new capital
(2)
Assumes redemption of TARP preferred stock at par and repurchase of warrants for an aggregate of $285 thousand, or $4.20 per warrant, post capital raise.  At this
time, no discussions with the Federal Reserve have taken place regarding the ability to repay TARP or to repurchase warrants
(3)
See Appendix for a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures
9.47%
11.85%
19.28%
19.49%
16.32%
18.52%
31.75%
31.95%
16.39%
17.94%
30.62%
30.82%
0.00%
5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
30.00%
35.00%
TCE / TA ³
Tier 1 Leverage Ratio
Tier 1 RBC Ratio
Total RBC Ratio
As of March 31, 2012
Pro Forma Capital Raise¹
Pro Forma Capital Raise and TARP Redemption²
4


26
$0.00
$5.00
$10.00
$15.00
$20.00
$25.00
12/06
05/07
10/07
02/08
07/08
11/08
04/09
09/09
01/10
06/10
10/10
03/11
08/11
12/11
NBN
Valuation
Stock Price Since 2007
$10.19
(1)
Nationwide peers include all public banks and thrifts with assets between $500 million and $700 million
(2)
Regional peers include all public banks and thrifts in New England with assets between $300 million and $1 billion
Source: SNL Financial
As of May 2, 2012
Price / Tangible Book Value Since 2007
63.9%
112.9%
105.2%
May 02, 2012
Price
$10.19
Current Price / TBV
63.9%
5/2/12
5/2/12
25%
50%
75%
100%
125%
150%
175%
200%
225%
12/06
05/07
10/07
03/08
08/08
01/09
06/09
11/09
04/10
09/10
02/11
07/11
12/11
NBN
NBN Nationwide Peers¹
NBN Regional Peers²


27
Well-Positioned for Performance
Proven ability to execute loan purchasing strategies
Strong position in bidding for performing commercial loans
Experienced management team and committed board of
directors
Attractive valuation –
opportunity to invest at key growth and
profitability juncture


Appendix


29
Summary of Recent Financials
(1)
“Predecessor
Company”
means
Northeast
Bancorp
and
its
subsidiary
before
the
closing
of
the
merger
with
FHB
Formation
LLC
on
December
29,
2010
(2)
“Successor
Company”
means
Northeast
Bancorp
and
its
subsidiary
after
the
closing
of
the
merger
with
FHB
Formation
LLC
on
December
29,
2010
(3)
As a result of the sale of Northeast Bank Insurance Group, Inc. in August 2011, tangible equity was increased by approximately $8.4 million.
Dollars in thousands
Predecessor
Company
1
As of
As of
As of
As of
6/30/2010
12/31/2010
6/30/2011
3/31/2012
Balance
Sheet
Purchased loans
$0
$0
$1
$56,916
Total originated loans
$382,309
$361,233
$309,912
$288,861
Total loans
$382,309
$361,233
$309,913
$345,777
Total assets
$622,607
$644,820
$596,393
$594,952
Core deposits
$286,710
$290,975
$372,789
$396,365
Total deposits
$384,197
$380,366
$401,118
$403,735
Total common equity
$46,679
$60,748
$60,727
$60,643
Total risk-based capital
$56,488
$58,901
$61,860
$70,694
Tangible book value per common share ³
$15.19
$13.41
$13.58
$15.94
Year Ended
181 Days Ended
184 Days Ended
Nine Months Ended
6/30/2010
12/28/2010
6/30/2011
3/31/2012
Income Statement
Interest and dividend income
$31,262
$14,378
$13,304
$18,659
Interest expense
$13,314
$5,877
$3,207
$4,711
Provision for loan losses
$1,864
$912
$707
$634
Income before taxes
$2,614
$2,564
$12,492
$1,506
Net income
$1,719
$1,796
$12,552
$1,115
Preferred stock dividends and accretion
$243
$119
$197
$294
Net Income available to common
$1,476
$1,677
$12,355
$821
Cash dividends per share
$0.36
$0.18
$0.18
$0.27
Weighted average diluted shares outstanding
2,334,339
2,354,385
3,548,164
3,494,498
Diluted earnings per common share
$0.63
$0.71
$3.47
$0.23
Net interest margin
3.18%
2.92%
3.58%
3.36%
Noninterest expense / Average total assets
3.18%
3.03%
5.58%
4.67%
Efficiency Ratio
82.4%
74.3%
56.6%
98.1%
Successor
Company ¹
Predecessor
Successor
Company ²
Company ²


30
Merger Requirements ¹
Maintain a Tier 1 leverage ratio of at least 10%;
Maintain
a total risk-based capital ratio of at least 15%;
Limit purchased loans to 40% of total loans;
At March 31, 2012 purchased loans of $56.9 million represent 16.2% of total loans;
Fund 100% of loans with core deposits²
At March 31, 2012 core deposits exceeded loans by $45.0 million
Hold commercial real estate loans including owner-occupied commercial real estate
to within 300% of total risk-based capital
At March
31,
2012
commercial
real
estate
loans
of
$168.4
million
represent
238%
of
total
risk-based
capital
(1)
Certain
commitments
made
to
the
Maine
Bureau
of
Financial
Institutions
and
the
Federal
Reserve
in
connection
with
the
merger
of
FHB
Formation
LLC into Northeast Bancorp on December 29, 2010.
(2)
Core deposits are defined as non-maturity deposits and non-brokered insured time deposits


31
Financial Description of the Merger
On December 29, 2010, the merger of the Company and FHB Formation LLC was consummated. FHB was the entity
through which a group of independent accredited investors purchased 937,933 shares of the Company’s outstanding
common stock and 1,161,166 shares of newly-issued voting and non-voting common stock, at a price equal to $13.93 per
share. As a result of this transaction, $16.2 million of new capital was contributed to the Company and the Investors
collectively own approximately 60% of the outstanding common shares of the Company. We have applied the acquisition
method of accounting, as described in Accounting Standards Codification 805, “Business Combinations,” to this
transaction, which represents an acquisition by FHB of Northeast, with Northeast as the surviving company.
As a result of application of the acquisition method of accounting to the Company’s balance sheet, the Company’s
financial statements from the periods prior to the transaction date are not directly comparable to the financial statements
for periods subsequent to the transaction date. To make this distinction, we have labeled balances and results of
operations prior to the transaction date as “Predecessor Company” and balances and results of operations for periods
subsequent to the transaction date as “Successor Company.” The lack of comparability arises from the assets and liabilities
having new accounting bases as a result of recording them at their fair values as of the transaction date rather than at
historical cost basis.
Under the acquisition method of accounting, the Company assets acquired and liabilities assumed are recorded at their
respective fair values as of the transaction date. In this transaction, the estimated fair values of the Company’s net assets
were greater than the purchase price. This resulted in a bargain purchase gain of $14.9 million, which was reported by the
Company as income in the three-day period ended December 31, 2010.


32
Sale of Northeast Bank Insurance Group, Inc.
On August 31, 2011, the Company sold customer lists and certain fixed assets of its wholly-owned subsidiary, Northeast
Bank Insurance Group, Inc. (“NBIG”) to local insurance agencies in two separate transactions. The Varney Agency, Inc. of
Bangor, Maine purchased the assets of nine NBIG offices in Anson, Auburn, Augusta, Bethel, Livermore Falls,
Scarborough, South Paris, Thomaston and Turner, Maine. The NBIG office in Berwick, Maine, which operates under the
name of Spence & Matthews, was acquired by Bradley Scott, previously a member of NBIG’s senior management team.
The following is a summary of the sale transactions.
Operations associated with NBIG have been classified as discontinued operations in the consolidated statements of
income.
The
Company
has
eliminated
all
intercompany
transactions
in
presenting
discontinued
operations.
Insurance
commissions
associated
with
NBIG
were
$965
thousand
for
the
nine
months
ended
March
31,
2012,
all
of
which
was
recognized in the first quarter of fiscal 2012. Insurance commissions were $1.5 million for the three months and 93 days
ended March 31, 2011 and $2.7 million for 181 days ended December 28, 2010. Intangible and fixed assets associated
with discontinued operations totaled approximately $7.4 million and $168 thousand, respectively, at June 30, 2011. In
connection with the transaction, the Company repaid borrowings associated with NBIG totaling $2.1 million.
Dollars in thousands
Sale proceeds
$9,863
Less:
Customer lists and other intangible assets, net
7,379
Fixed assets, net of accumulated depreciation
165
Severance and other direct expenses
768
Pre-tax gain recognized
$1,551


33
Historical Balance Sheet
(1)
“Successor Company” means Northeast Bancorp and its subsidiary after the closing of the merger with FHB Formation LLC on December 29, 2010
(2)
“Predecessor Company” means Northeast Bancorp and its subsidiary before the closing of the merger with FHB Formation LLC on December 29, 2010
Dollars in thousands
Predecessor
Company
2
As of
As of
As of
As of
6/30/2010
12/31/2010
6/30/2011
3/31/2012
Assets
20,435
$
72,182
$
83,931
$
64,880
164,188
153,521
148,962
136,730
14,254
8,195
5,176
6,354
382,309
361,233
309,913
345,777
5,806
-
437
748
Loans, net
376,503
361,233
309,476
345,029
7,997
8,013
8,271
8,918
1,292
965
690
915
2,081
1,878
1,244
1,659
4,889
4,889
4,889
4,602
597
597
871
871
11,371
13,739
13,133
4,749
13,286
13,540
13,794
14,171
5,714
6,068
5,956
6,074
Total Assets
622,607
$
644,820
$
596,393
$
594,952
$
384,197
$           
380,366
$          
401,118
$          
403,735
$          
Federal Home Loan Bank Advances
50,500
52,244
43,922
43,567
Structured repurchase agreements
65,000
68,877
68,008
66,636
Short-term borrowings
46,168
62,034
2,515
1,836
Junior subordinated debentures issued to affiliated trusts
16,496
7,889
7,957
8,066
Capital lease obligation
2,231
2,154
2,075
1,953
Other borrowings
2,630
2,134
2,229
-
Other liabilities
4,479
4,147
3,615
4,289
Total Liabilities
571,701
579,845
531,439
530,082
4,227
4,227
4,227
4,227
46,679
60,748
60,727
60,643
50,906
64,975
64,954
64,870
Total Liabilities and Equity
622,607
$
644,820
$          
596,393
$          
594,952
$          
Successor
Common equity
Total Equity
Bank owned life insurance
Other assets
Liabilities
Deposits
Equity
TARP preferred equity
Intangible assets, net
Company
1
Cash and cash equivalents
Available-for-sale Securities, at fair value
Loans held for sale
Loans
Less:  Allowance for Loan Losses
Premises and equipment, net
Repossessed collateral, net
Accrued interest receivable
Federal Home Loan Bank Stock, at cost
Federal Reserve Bank Stock, at cost
$


34
Historical Income Statement
(1)
“Successor
Company”
means
Northeast
Bancorp
and
its
subsidiary
after
the
closing
of
the
merger
with
FHB
Formation
LLC
on
December
29,
2010
(2)
“Predecessor Company”
means Northeast Bancorp and its subsidiary before the closing of the merger with FHB Formation LLC on December 29, 2010
Dollars in thousands
181
184
Nine
Year Ended
Days Ended
Days Ended
Months Ended
6/30/2010
12/28/2010
6/30/2011
3/31/2012
31,262
$                    
14,378
$                    
13,304
$                    
18,659
$                    
13,314
5,877
3,207
4,711
17,948
8,501
10,097
13,948
1,864
912
707
634
16,084
7,589
9,390
13,314
1,504
698
670
1,036
(18)
17
1,200
1,111
1,264
1,867
830
2,482
2,054
1,174
1,435
2,111
502
250
258
377
-
-
15,441
-
377
225
348
120
5,683
4,231
20,182
7,237
9,921
4,949
7,681
11,539
2,772
1,352
1,627
2,735
Professional fees
845
509
819
1,231
-
-
663
935
Goodwill impairment
408
-
-
-
FDIC insurance premiums
745
346
269
364
Merger expense
547
94
3,189
-
4,235
2,205
2,900
3,978
19,473
9,455
17,148
20,782
2,294
2,365
12,424
(231)
782
698
(83)
(209)
Net income (loss) from continuing operations
1,512
1,667
12,507
(22)
Net income (loss) from discontinued operations
207
129
45
1,137
Net income
1,719
1,796
12,552
1,115
243
119
197
294
1,476
$                      
1,677
$                      
12,355
$                    
821
$                          
Weighted-average diluted common shares outstanding
2,334,339
2,354,385
3,548,164
3,494,498
0.54
$                        
0.66
$                        
3.46
$                        
(0.09)
$                       
0.09
0.05
0.01
0.32
Total diluted earnings per common share
0.63
$                        
0.71
$                        
3.47
$                        
0.23
$                        
Net interest and dividend income after provision for loan losses
Successor Company¹
Interest and dividend income
Interest expense
Net Interest Income
Provision for Loan Losses
Predecessor Company
2
Other expense
Fees for other services to customers
Net security gains (losses)
Gain on sales of loans
Investment commissions
Bank-owned life insurance income
Bargain purchase gain
Other income
Total noninterest income
Salaries and employee benefits
Occupancy and equipment expense
Intangible asset amortization
Diluted earnings (loss) per common share:
Continuing operations
Discontinued operations
Total noninterest expense
Income (loss) from continuing operations before income tax expense (benefit)
Income tax expense (benefit)
Preferred stock dividends and discount accretion
Net income available to common stockholders


35
Non-GAAP Reconciliation
(1)
“Successor Company” means Northeast Bancorp and its subsidiary after the closing of the merger with FHB Formation LLC on December 29, 2010
(2)
“Predecessor Company” means Northeast Bancorp and its subsidiary before the closing of the merger with FHB Formation LLC on December 29, 2010
We calculate tangible common equity by excluding the balance of intangible assets from common stockholders’ equity. We
calculate tangible book value per share by dividing tangible common equity by actual common shares outstanding, as
compared to book value per common share, which we calculate by dividing common stockholder’s equity by actual
common shares outstanding. We calculate tangible common equity to tangible assets by dividing tangible common equity
by tangible assets. We believe that this is consistent with the treatment by bank regulatory agencies, which exclude
intangible assets from the calculation of risk-based capital ratios. Accordingly, we believe that these non-GAAP financial
measures provide information that is important to investors and that is useful in understanding our capital position and
ratios. A reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures of tangible assets, tangible common equity and tangible book value per
share to the GAAP measures of common stockholder’s equity and book value per share is set forth below.
Dollars in thousands
Predecessor
Company
2
As of
As of
As of
As of
6/30/2010
12/31/2010
6/30/2011
3/31/2012
Total Assets
622,607
$            
644,820
$            
596,393
$            
594,952
$            
Less: Intangible Assets
11,371
13,739
13,133
4,749
Tangible Assets
611,236
$            
631,081
$            
583,260
$            
590,203
$            
Total Shareholders' Equity
50,906
$              
64,975
$              
64,954
$              
64,870
$              
Less: Preferred Stock
4,227
4,227
4,227
4,227
Common Shareholders' Equity
46,679
60,748
60,727
60,643
Less: Intangible Assets
11,371
13,739
13,133
4,749
Tangible Common Equity
35,308
$              
47,009
$              
47,594
$              
55,894
$              
Book Value Per Common Share
20.08
$                  
17.33
$                  
17.33
$                  
17.29
$                  
Less: Intangible Assets Per Common Share
4.89
3.92
3.75
1.35
Tangible Book Value Per Common Share
15.19
$                  
13.41
$                  
13.58
$                  
15.94
$                  
Tangible Common Equity / Tangible Assets
5.78%
7.45%
8.16%
9.47%
Share Information:
Common Shares Outstanding
2,323,832
3,505,524
3,507,524
3,507,524
Company
1
Successor