Filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3)
                                                File No. 333-118815


                                  Interests in
                           Kearny Federal Savings Bank
              Employees' Savings and Profit Sharing Plan and Trust
                                       and
                          Offering of 488,038 Shares of
                     Common Stock, $.10 par value per share,
                                       of
                             Kearny Financial Corp.

         This   prospectus   supplement   relates  to  the  offer  and  sale  to
participants in the Kearny Federal  Savings Bank  Employees'  Savings and Profit
Sharing Plan and Trust of participation interests and shares of Kearny Financial
Corp.

         In  connection  with the initial  public  offering  of common  stock of
Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  the plan has been amended to permit the investment of
plan assets in various participant directed investment  alternatives,  including
investment in the stock of Kearny  Financial Corp. Your  eligibility to purchase
stock  utilizing  your 401(k) Plan  assets is  determined  based upon your stock
subscription rights as a depositor of Kearny Federal Savings Bank. Participation
in the 401(k) Plan does not give you any special rights to purchase stock in the
initial public offering.  You may direct the trustee of the plan to purchase the
stock with plan assets  which are  attributable  to you as a  participant.  This
prospectus supplement relates to your decision whether or not to invest all or a
portion of your plan funds in Kearny Financial Corp. common stock.

         If you direct the trustee to invest all or a portion of your plan funds
in Kearny Financial Corp. common stock in the initial public offering, the price
paid for such shares will be $10.00 per share. This price is the price that will
be paid by all other  persons  who  purchase  shares of Kearny  Financial  Corp.
common stock in the initial public offering.

         If you direct the trustee to invest all or a portion of your plan funds
in Kearny Financial Corp. common stock after the initial public offering, shares
purchased for your account in open market  transactions,  and the price paid for
such shares will be the market price at the time of the  purchase,  which may be
more or less than the initial public offering price of $10.00 per share.

         The prospectus of Kearny Financial Corp., dated December 28, 2004 which
is  attached  to  this  prospectus  supplement,  includes  detailed  information
regarding  Kearny  Financial Corp.  common stock,  and the financial  condition,
results of  operation,  and  business  of  Kearny.  This  prospectus  supplement
provides  information  regarding  the plan.  You  should  read  this  prospectus
supplement together with the prospectus and keep both for future reference.

         Please refer to Risk Factors beginning on page 12 of the prospectus.

         These   securities  have  not  been  approved  or  disapproved  by  the
Securities and Exchange  Commission,  the Office of Thrift  Supervision,  or any
other  federal  agency  or  any  state  securities  commission,   nor  has  such
commission,  office,  or other agency or any state securities  commission passed
upon the accuracy or adequacy of this prospectus supplement.  Any representation
to the contrary is a criminal offense.

         These  securities  are not  deposits  or savings  accounts  and are not
insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation or any other
government agency.

         The date of this prospectus supplement is December 28, 2004.



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                                                          
The Offering......................................................................................................1

         Securities Offered.......................................................................................1
         Election to Purchase Stock in the Initial Offering.......................................................1
         Value of Participation Interests.........................................................................2
         Purchase Price of Kearny Financial Corp. Common Stock....................................................2
         Method of Directing Investments..........................................................................3
         Time for Directing Investment............................................................................3
         Irrevocability of Investment Direction...................................................................3
         Direction to Purchase the Stock After the Initial Offering...............................................3
         Nature of Each Participant's Interest in
                  Kearny Financial Corp. Common Stock.............................................................4
         Voting and Tender Rights of the Stock....................................................................4
         Minimum Investment.......................................................................................4

Description of the Plan...........................................................................................4

         General..................................................................................................4
         Eligibility and Participation............................................................................5
         Contributions and Benefits Under the Plan................................................................5
         Limitations on Contributions.............................................................................5
         Investment of Plan Assets................................................................................6
         Performance of Previous Funds............................................................................8
         Performance of Employer Stock Fund.......................................................................8
         Benefits Under the Plan................................................................................. 9
         Withdrawals and Distributions From the Plan............................................................. 9
         Administration of the Plan............................................................................. 11
         Reports to Plan Participants........................................................................... 11
         Amendment and Termination.............................................................................. 12
         Merger, Consolidation, or Transfer..................................................................... 12
         Federal Income Tax Consequences.........................................................................12
         Restrictions on Resale..................................................................................13
         Additional Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA") Considerations.............................13
         SEC Reporting and Short-Swing Profit Liability..........................................................13
         Additional Information..................................................................................14

Legal Opinions...................................................................................................14

Investment Election Form.................................................................................Appendix-A

Change of Investment Allocation Form.....................................................................Appendix-B

Special Tax Notice Regarding Plan Payments...............................................................Appendix-C





                                  THE OFFERING

Securities Offered

         The securities  offered in connection with this  prospectus  supplement
are  participation  interests in the plan and shares of Kearny  Financial  Corp.
common stock.  Only  employees of Kearny who meet the  eligibility  requirements
under the plan may participate. Information with regard to the plan is contained
in this prospectus  supplement and information with regard to the stock offering
and the financial  condition,  results of  operation,  and business of Kearny is
contained in the attached prospectus.

Election to Purchase Stock in the Initial Offering

         Your eligibility to purchase stock utilizing your 401(k) Plan assets is
determined  based  upon  your  stock  subscription  rights as a member of Kearny
Federal  Savings  Bank.  Participation  in the 401(k) Plan does not give you any
special rights to purchase stock in the initial public offering.  You may direct
the  trustee of the plan to invest  all or part of the funds in your  account in
the Employer Stock Fund. Based upon your election, the trustees of the plan will
subscribe for Kearny Financial Corp.  shares in the initial  offering.  You also
will be permitted to direct ongoing  purchases of the stock under the plan after
the  initial  offering.  See  "Direction  to  Purchase  Stock  After the Initial
Offering." The plan's trustee will follow your  investment  directions.  Amounts
not  transferred  to the Employer  Stock Fund will remain  invested in the other
investment  funds  of the  plan as  directed  by you.  See  "Investment  of Plan
Assets." Your  investment in the common stock of Kearny  Financial  Corp. in the
offering  through the Kearny Financial Corp. Stock Fund available under the Plan
is subject to the purchase priorities contained in the plan of stock issuance of
Kearny Financial Corp.

         All Plan participants are eligible to direct a transfer of funds to the
Kearny Financial Corp. Stock Fund.  However,  such directions are subject to the
purchase priorities in the plan of stock issuance as follows:

1.   Eligible account holders

2.   Tax-qualified  employee benefit plans of Kearny Financial Corp.,  including
     the employee stock ownership plan which we intend to adopt, and

3.   Supplemental eligible account holders

         An eligible  account  holder is a depositor  whose  deposit  account(s)
totaled $50.00 or more on March 31, 2003. A supplemental eligible account holder
is a depositor whose deposit  account(s) totaled $50.00 or more on September 30,
2004. If you fall into  subscription  offering  categories  (1) or (3), you have
subscription rights to purchase shares of Kearny Financial Corp. common stock in
the  subscription  offering and you may use funds in the Plan account to pay for
the shares of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  common  stock which you are  eligible to
purchase.  You may also be able to  purchase  shares of Kearny  Financial  Corp.
common stock in the subscription offering even though you are unable to purchase
through  subscription  offering  categories (1) or (3) if Kearny Financial Corp.
determines to allow the Plan to purchase  shares through  subscription  offering
category  (2),  reserved for its  tax-qualified  employee  plans,  including the
employee stock ownership plan which will be adopted by Kearny Financial Corp. in

                                        1



connection with the offering.  The trustee of the Kearny  Financial Corp.  Stock
Fund will purchase  common stock in accordance  with your  directions.  No later
than the closing date of the subscription  offering period,  the amount that you
elect to transfer from your existing account balances for the purchase of common
stock  in  the  offering  will  be  removed  from  your  existing  accounts  and
transferred to an interest-bearing account, pending the closing of the offering.
At the close of the offering,  and subject to a determination  as to whether all
or any portion of your order may be filed (based on your  purchase  priority and
whether the offering is oversubscribed), all or a portion of the amount that you
have transferred to purchase stock in the offering will be applied to the common
stock purchase.

         In the event the offering is oversubscribed, i.e. there are more orders
for common stock than shares available for sale in the offering, and the trustee
is unable to use the full amount  allocated  by you to purchase  common stock in
the  offering,  the  amount  that  cannot be  invested  in common  stock will be
reinvested  in the  investment  funds of the Plan.  The  amount  that  cannot be
applied to the purchase of common  stock in the  offering and any interest  your
account  earned,  pending  investment  in common  stock,  will be  reinvested in
accordance  with your then existing  investment  election (in proportion to your
investment  direction  for  future  contributions).  If you fail to  direct  the
investment  of your  account  balances  towards  the  purchase  of any shares in
connection  with  the  offering,  your  account  balances  will  remain  in  the
investment funds of the Plan as previously directed by you.

Value of Participation Interests

         As of December  28,  2004,  the total market value of the assets of the
plan equaled $4,880,388. The plan administrator has informed each participant of
the value of his or her account in the plan as of January 3, 2005.  The value of
the plan  assets  represents  your  past  contributions  to the  plan,  employer
matching contributions,  profit-sharing contributions, plus or minus earnings or
losses on  contributions,  less withdrawals and loans. You may direct up to 100%
of the  value of your  account  assets to invest  in the  Employer  Stock  Fund.
However,  in connection with the initial  offering of the stock, if you elect to
purchase  the stock,  you will be  required  to invest a minimum  amount of your
account assets in the Employer Stock Fund.

Purchase Price of Kearny Financial Corp. Common Stock

         The funds  transferred  to the Employer  Stock Fund for the purchase of
the stock issued in the initial offering will be used by the trustee to purchase
shares of Kearny Financial Corp. common stock. The price paid for such shares of
the stock will be $10.00. This price is the price that will be paid by all other
persons who purchase shares of the stock in the initial offering.

         Your account assets  directed for investment in the Employer Stock Fund
after the initial  offering shall be invested by the trustee to purchase  shares
of Kearny Financial Corp.  common stock in open market  transactions.  The price
paid by the trustee for shares of the Kearny Financial Corp. common stock in the
initial  offering,  or otherwise,  will not exceed "adequate  consideration"  as
defined in Section 3(18) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.

                                        2



Method of Directing Investments

         Appendix  A  of  this  prospectus  supplement  includes  an  investment
election  form for you to direct a transfer  to the  Employer  Stock Fund in the
initial offering of all or a portion of your account under the plan.  Appendix B
of  this  prospectus   supplement   includes  Pentegra's  change  of  investment
allocation  form  which  is to be used to  direct  future  contributions  to the
Employer Stock Fund after the initial offering.

         If you wish to invest all or part of your account in the Employer Stock
Fund in the initial offering you need to complete Appendix A. Additionally,  you
may indicate the directed investment of future  contributions under the plan for
investment  in the  Employer  Stock Fund.  If you wish to direct  investment  of
future contributions in the Employer Stock Fund, you need to complete Appendices
A and B. If you do not wish to make an investment  election,  you do not need to
take any action.

Time for Directing Investment

         The  deadline  for  submitting  your  direction  to invest funds in the
Employer  Stock  Fund in order to  purchase  the  stock  issued  in the  initial
offering  is noon on January  21,  2005.  If you want to invest in the  Employer
Stock Fund,  you must return the attached form to Kim Manfredo of Kearny by noon
on January 21, 2005.

         After  the  initial  offering,  you will  still be able to  direct  the
investment  of your  account  under the plan in the  Employer  Stock Fund and in
other investment alternatives.

Irrevocability of Investment Direction

         The  direction to invest your plan funds in the Employer  Stock Fund in
the  initial  offering  cannot be changed  after you have  turned in your forms.
However, you will be able to direct your account to purchase the stock after the
initial  offering by directing  amounts in your account into the Employer  Stock
Fund.

Direction to Purchase the Stock After the Stock Offering

         Following  completion of the stock  offering,  you will be permitted to
direct that a certain percentage of your interest in the trust fund (up to 100%)
be transferred to the Employer Stock Fund and invested in Kearny Financial Corp.
common  stock,  or to the  other  investment  funds  available  under  the plan.
Alternatively,  you may direct that a certain percentage of your interest in the
Employer Stock Fund be transferred to the trust fund to be invested in the other
investment  funds  available in accordance  with the terms of the plan.  You can
direct  future  contributions  made to the plan by you or on your  behalf  to be
invested in the  Employer  Stock Fund.  Following  your  initial  election,  the
allocation of your  interest in the Employer  Stock Fund may be changed daily by
filing a change of investment  allocation form with the plan administrator or by
calling  Pentegra's  voice  response  unit at (800)  433-4422 and changing  your
investment allocation by phone or by internet at www.Pentegra.com

                                        3



Nature of Each Participant's Interest in Kearny Financial Corp. Common Stock

         The trustee will hold Kearny  Financial Corp.  common stock in the name
of the plan. Each participant has an allocable  interest in the investment funds
of the  plan  but not in any  particular  assets  of the  plan.  Accordingly,  a
specific number of shares of the stock will not be directly  attributable to the
account of any individual participant. Dividend rights associated with the stock
held by the Employer  Stock Fund will be  allocated to the Employer  Stock Fund.
Any  increase  (or  decrease)  in the value of the fund as a result of  dividend
rights  will  be  reflected  in each  participant's  allocable  interest  in the
Employer Stock Fund.

Voting and Tender Rights of the Stock

         You will  direct the  trustee of the plan about how to vote your Kearny
Financial  Corp.  shares.  If you do  not  give  voting  instruction  or  tender
instruction to the trustee,  the trustee will vote or tender those shares within
its  discretion  as a  fiduciary  under  the  plan or as  directed  by the  plan
administrator.

Minimum Investment

         The minimum  investment  of assets  directed by a  participant  for the
purchase of the stock in the initial  offering is $250.00,  and investments must
be in increments of $10.00.  Funds may be directed for the purchase of the stock
attributable to your account  regardless of whether your account assets are 100%
vested at the time of your  investment  election.  There is no minimum  level of
investment after the initial offering for investment in the Employer Stock Fund.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PLAN

General

         Kearny adopted a 401(k) plan effective July 1, 2000.  Effective October
1, 2004,  Kearny amended and restated its old plan into the new plan in order to
include the Employer Stock Fund as an investment alternative.  The new plan is a
deferred   compensation   arrangement   established   in  accordance   with  the
requirements  under Section  401(a) and Section  401(k) of the Internal  Revenue
Code. The plan will be submitted to the IRS for a determination  by the IRS that
the plan is qualified under Section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code and that
its trust is qualified under Section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. Kearny
intends  for the plan,  in  operation,  to comply  with the  requirements  under
Section  401(a) and Section  401(k) of the Internal  Revenue  Code.  Kearny will
adopt any  amendments  to the plan that may be necessary to ensure the continued
qualified  status of the plan under the Internal  Revenue Code and other federal
regulations.

         Employee  Retirement  Income  Security Act. The plan is an  "individual
         ------------------------------------------
account plan" other than a "money  purchase  pension plan" within the meaning of
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. As such, the plan is subject to all
of the provisions of Title I (Protection of Employee  Benefit  Rights) and Title
II (Amendments to the Internal Revenue Code Relating to Retirement Plans) of the
act, except the funding requirements  contained in Part 3 of Title I of the act,
which do not apply to an  individual  account plan (other than a money  purchase
plan). The plan is not subject to Title IV (Plan  Termination  Insurance) of the
act. Neither the funding requirements  contained in Part 3 of Title I of the act
nor the plan

                                        4



termination  insurance  provisions  contained  in  Title  IV of the act  will be
extended to participants or beneficiaries under the plan.

         Federal  tax law  imposes  substantial  restrictions  on your  right to
withdraw  amounts held under the plan before your termination of employment with
Kearny.  Federal  law may also impose a 10% excise tax on  withdrawals  you make
from the plan  before you reach the age of 59 1/2,  regardless  of  whether  the
withdrawal occurs during or after your employment with Kearny.

         Full Text of Plan. The following portions of this prospectus supplement
         -----------------
are summaries of provisions in the plan. They are not complete and are qualified
in their  entirety  by the full text of the plan.  You may obtain  copies of the
full plan by sending a request to Kim Manfredo at Kearny.  You should  carefully
read  the  full  text  of the  plan  document  to  understand  your  rights  and
obligations under the plan.


Eligibility and Participation

         You may  participate  in the plan on the first  day of the month  after
completing  1,000 hours of service during a 12-month  period with Kearny.  As of
November 18, 2004, there were 243 employees  eligible to participate in the plan
and 220  employees  had  elected to  participate.  The plan year is January 1 to
December 31.

Contributions and Benefits Under the Plan

         Plan  Participant  Contributions.  You can  contribute to the plan on a
         --------------------------------
pretax basis. Contributions are automatically deducted from your salary each pay
period. Salary means base salary plus overtime.  When you contribute on a pretax
basis,  you pay no federal income tax on your deferrals until you withdraw money
from the plan.  You are permitted  amounts of not less than 1% and not more than
75% of your annual base salary to the plan  excluding  bonuses and  commissions.
You may  change the amount of your  contributions  at any time and your  changes
will be effective on the first day of the following pay period.

         Kearny  Contributions.  Kearny may match your contribution to the plan,
         ---------------------
but we are not obligated to match your  contributions.  Kearny currently matches
100% of your  contributions up to 3% of your salary.  Kearny  contributions  are
subject to revision by us.

Limitation on Contributions

         Limitation on Employee Salary Deferral.  Although you may contribute up
         --------------------------------------
to 75% of your pay to the plan, federal tax law limits the dollar amount of your
annual  contribution  to $14,000 in 2005. If you are age 50 or more you can make
catch-up   contributions  of  $4,000  in  2005.  The  Internal  Revenue  Service
periodically  adjusts this limit for inflation.  Contributions in excess of this
limit and earnings on those  contributions  generally will be returned to you by
April 15 of the year  following your  contribution,  and they will be subject to
regular federal income taxes.

         Limitation on Annual  Additions  and  Benefits.  Under federal tax law,
         ----------------------------------------------
your  contributions  and our contributions to the plan may not exceed the lesser
of 100% of your annual pay, or $42,000.

                                        5



Contributions  that we make to any other retirement  program that we sponsor may
also count against these limits.

         Special Rules About Highly-Paid  Employees.  Special  provisions of the
         ------------------------------------------
Internal  Revenue Code limit  contributions  by employees who receive annual pay
greater than $95,000. If you are in this category, some of your contribution may
be returned if your contribution,  when measured as a percentage of your pay, is
substantially higher than the contributions made by other employees.

         If your annual pay is less than $135,000,  we may be required to make a
minimum  contribution  to the  plan  of 3% of  your  annual  pay if the  plan is
considered  to be a "top  heavy"  plan  under  federal  tax  law.  The  plan  is
considered  "top  heavy"  if, in any year,  the  value of the plan  accounts  of
employees making more than $135,000  represent more than 60 percent of the value
of all accounts.


Investment of Plan Assets

         All amounts  credited to your plan account are held in trust. A trustee
appointed by Kearny's Board of Directors  administers  the trust and invests the
plan assets. The plan offers the following investment choices:

         S&P  500  Stock  Fund:  Invests  in the  stocks  of a  broad  array  of
established U.S. companies.  Its objective is long-term:  to earn higher returns
by investing in the largest companies in the U.S. economy.

         Stable Value Fund: Invests primarily in Guaranteed Investment Contracts
and   Synthetic   Guaranteed    Investment    Contracts.    Its   objective   is
short-to-intermediate   term:   to  achieve  a  stable   return  over  short  to
intermediate  periods  of time  while  preserving  the value of a  participant's
investment.

         S&P  MidCap  Stock  Fund:  Invests  in the  stocks  of  mid-sized  U.S.
companies. Its objective is long- term: to earn higher returns which reflect the
growth potential of such companies.

         Money Market Fund: Invests in a broad range of high-quality  short-term
instruments.  Its objective is  short-term:  to achieve  competitive  short-term
rates of return while preserving the value of the participant's principal.

         Government Bond Fund: Invests in U.S. Treasury bonds with maturities of
20 years or more.  Its objective is long-term:  to earn a higher level of income
along with the potential for capital appreciation.

         Income Plus Asset Allocation  Fund:  Invests  approximately  80% of its
portfolio in a  combination  of stable value  investments  and U.S.  bonds.  The
balance  is  invested  in  U.S.  and  international  stocks.  Its  objective  is
intermediate-term:  to preserve  the value of a  participant's  investment  over
short periods of time and to offer some potential for growth.

         Growth and Income Asset Allocation Fund:  Invests in U.S.  domestic and
international  stocks,  U.S. domestic bonds, and stable value  investments.  Its
objective  is  intermediate-term:  to provide a balance  between  the pursuit of
growth and protection from risk.

                                        6



         Growth  Asset  Allocation  Fund:  Invests the majority of its assets in
stocks -- domestic as well as  international.  Its  objective is  long-term:  to
pursue high growth of a participant's investment over time.

         International  Stock Fund:  Invests in over 1,000 foreign  stocks in 20
countries.  Its  objective  is  long-term:  to offer  the  potential  return  of
investing  in the  stocks  of  established  non-U.S.  companies,  as well as the
potential risk-reduction of broad diversification.

         Russell  2000 Stock Fund:  Invests in most,  or all, of the same stocks
held in the Russell 2000 Index. Its objective is long-term: to earn high returns
in smaller U.S. companies by matching its benchmark, the Russell 2000 Index.

         S&P 500/Growth Stock Fund:  Invests in most, or all, of the stocks held
in the S&P/BARRA Growth Index which are large-capitalization  growth stocks. Its
objective is long-term: to match its benchmark, the S&P/BARRA Growth Index.

         S&P 500/Value  Stock Fund:  Invests in most, or all, of the stocks held
in the S&P/BARRA Value Index which are  large-capitalization  value stocks.  Its
objective is long-term: to match its benchmark, the S&P/BARRA Value Index.

         Nasdaq 100 Stock Fund:  The fund is intended  for  long-term  investors
seeking to capture the growth  potential  of the 100  largest and most  actively
traded non-financial  companies on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The Fund's benchmark
is the Nasdaq 100 Index.

         Employer Stock Fund.  The Employer Stock Fund invests  primarily in the
common stock of Kearny Financial Corp.

                                        7



Performance of Previous Funds

         The annual  percentage  return on these funds for calendar  years 2003,
2002 and 2001 was approximately:


                         Fund                2003          2002         2001
                         ----                ----          ----         ----
Money Market Fund                            0.9%          1.6%          4.0%
Stable Value Fund                            4.3%          5.3%          5.7%
Government Bond Fund                         1.3%         16.4%          3.2%
S&P 500 Stock Fund                           28.0%       (22.4%)       (12.3%)
S&P MidCap Stock Fund                        35.1%       (15.0%)       ( 0.9%)
International Stock Fund                     37.1%       (18.5%)       (22.0%)
Income Plus Asset Allocation Fund            11.7%        (2.6%)         1.7%
Growth Asset Allocation Fund                 28.3%       (18.8%)       (14.0%)
Growth & Income Asset Allocation Fund        19.7%       (10.3%)        (5.2%)
Russell 2000 Stock Fund                      46.0%       (20.7%)         2.0%
S&P 500/Growth Stock Fund                    24.9%       (24.0%)       (13.3%)
S&P 500/Value Stock Fund                     30.6%       (21.2%)       (12.2%)
Nasdaq 100 Stock Fund                        48.3%       (37.6%)       (32.7%)
Employer Stock Fund                           N/A          N/A           N/A

Performance of the Employer Stock Fund

         The  Employer  Stock Fund is  invested  in the  common  stock of Kearny
Financial Corp. As of the date of this prospectus supplement, none of the shares
of common stock have been issued or are  outstanding and there is no established
market for the Kearny  Financial Corp.  common stock.  Accordingly,  there is no
record of the investment  performance of the Employer Stock Fund. Performance of
the Employer Stock Fund depends on a number of factors,  including the financial
condition and  profitability of Kearny Financial Corp. and market conditions for
Kearny Financial Corp. common stock generally.

         Please  note  that  investment  in the  Employer  Stock  Fund is not an
investment in a savings  account or certificate of deposit,  and such investment
in Kearny  Financial  Corp.  common stock through the Employer Stock Fund is not
insured by the FDIC or any other regulatory agency.  Further,  no assurances can
be given with respect to the price at which the stock may be sold in the future.

                                        8



         Investments  in the  Employer  Stock Fund may involve  certain  special
risks relating to investments in the common stock of Kearny  Financial Corp. For
a discussion of these risk factors,  see "Risk Factors"  beginning on page 12 of
the prospectus.

Benefits Under the Plan

         Vesting.  The contributions  that you make in the plan are fully vested
         -------
and cannot be forfeited. You are 100% vested in our matching contributions.  You
vest in employer supplemental contributions as follows:

Withdrawals and Distributions From the Plan

         APPLICABLE   FEDERAL  LAW  REQUIRES  THE  PLAN  TO  IMPOSE  SUBSTANTIAL
RESTRICTIONS ON THE RIGHT OF A PLAN PARTICIPANT TO WITHDRAW AMOUNTS HELD FOR HIS
OR HER  BENEFIT  UNDER  THE  PLAN  PRIOR  TO THE  PARTICIPANT'S  TERMINATION  OF
EMPLOYMENT  WITH KEARNY  FINANCIAL  CORP. A SUBSTANTIAL  FEDERAL TAX PENALTY MAY
ALSO BE IMPOSED ON WITHDRAWALS MADE PRIOR TO THE PARTICIPANT'S ATTAINMENT OF AGE
59 1/2,  REGARDLESS  OF  WHETHER  SUCH A  WITHDRAWAL  OCCURS  DURING  HIS OR HER
EMPLOYMENT WITH KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. OR AFTER TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT.

         Withdrawals  Before  Termination  of  Employment.   Your  plan  account
         ------------------------------------------------
provides you with a source of retirement income.  But, while you are employed by
Kearny,  if you need  funds  from your  account  before  retirement,  you may be
eligible  to receive  either an  in-service  withdrawal,  or (from your  pre-tax
contributions)  a hardship  distribution or a loan. You can apply for a hardship
distribution  or a loan from the plan by contacting  Kim Manfredo at Kearny.  In
order to  qualify  for a hardship  withdrawal,  you must have an  immediate  and
substantial  need to meet certain  expenses,  like a mortgage payment or medical
bill, and have no other  reasonably  available  resources to meet your financial
need.  If you qualify  for a hardship  distribution,  the trustee  will make the
distribution  proportionately  from  the  investment  funds  in  which  you have
invested your account balance. Hardship withdrawals (except for medical expenses
exceeding  7.5% of your adjusted gross income) and  in-service  withdrawals  are
subject to the 10% early distribution penalty.  Loans are not subject to the 10%
early distribution penalty.

         Participants' pre-tax elective deferrals may not be distributed earlier
than upon separation from service,  death,  disability,  or attainment of age 59
1/2.

         You may make voluntary  withdrawals of your pre-tax elective  deferrals
and  earnings  thereon as of December  31, 1988 only in the event of hardship or
attainment of age 59 1/2. You may withdraw earnings after December 31, 1988 only
in the event of attainment of age 59 1/2. You may also make  withdrawals of your
employee  rollover  contributions  and the  earnings  thereon,  and of  employer
matching contributions,  if any, and the earnings thereon. You may make not more
than one voluntary withdrawal from your account in a Plan Year.

         In general,  employer contributions credited on your behalf will not be
available for in-service withdrawal until such employer  contributions have been
invested in the Plan for at least 2 years or you

                                        9



have been a participant in the Plan for at least 5 years or in the event of your
death,  disability,  retirement,  attainment  of age 59  1/2 or  termination  of
employment.

         Distributions  Upon Termination for Any Other Reason.  If you terminate
         ----------------------------------------------------
employment with Kearny for any reason other than retirement, disability or death
and your account balance exceeds $500, the trustee will distribute your benefits
to you the later of the April 1 of the  calendar  year after you turn age 70 1/2
or when you retire, unless you request otherwise. You may elect to maintain your
account balance in the plan for as long as Kearny  maintains the plan or you may
elect one or more of the forms of distribution available under the plan. If your
account balance does not exceed $500, the trustee will generally distribute your
benefits to you as soon as administratively practicable following termination of
employment.

         Distributions  Upon Disability.  If you can no longer work because of a
         ------------------------------
disability,  as defined in the plan, you may withdraw your total account balance
under the plan and have that amount paid to you in accordance  with the terms of
the plan. If you later become reemployed after you have withdrawn some or all of
your account balance, you may not repay to the plan any withdrawn amounts.

         Withdrawal  Upon Death.  If you die while you are a participant  in the
         ----------------------
Plan, the value of your entire account will be payable to your beneficiary.  You
may elect to have your beneficiary receive distribution in 5 annual installments
(10 if your spouse is your  beneficiary,  provided that your spouse's  remaining
life  expectancy is at least 10 years).  If such an election is not in effect at
the time of your death, your beneficiary may elect to receive the benefit in the
form of  annual  installments  over a period  not to exceed 5 years (10 years if
your spouse is your  beneficiary,  provided  that your spouse's  remaining  life
expectancy is at least 10 years) or make  withdrawals as often as once per year,
except that any balance remaining must be withdrawn by the 5th anniversary (10th
anniversary  if your spouse is your  beneficiary,  provided  that your  spouse's
remaining life expectancy is at least 10 years) of your death.

         Distributions  of the Stock of Kearny  Financial Corp. If you receive a
         -----------------------------------------------------
distribution  from the plan and assets under the plan have been  directed by you
to be invested in the Employer Stock Fund, you may have those assets distributed
in kind in the form of stock of Kearny Financial Corp.

         Form of  Benefits.  Payment  of your  benefits  upon  your  retirement,
         -----------------
disability, or other termination of employment will be made either in a lump sum
payment or installments.

         If you die  before  receiving  benefits  pursuant  to your  retirement,
disability,  or termination of employment,  your beneficiary will receive a lump
sum  payment,  unless the payment  would exceed $500 and an election is made for
annual installments up to 5 years. Your spouse can receive payments for up to 10
years.

         Nonalienation  of Benefits.  Except with respect to federal  income tax
         --------------------------
withholding  and as  provided  with  respect to a qualified  domestic  relations
order, as defined in the Internal Revenue Code,  benefits payable under the plan
shall not be subject in any manner to anticipation,  alienation, sale, transfer,
assignment, pledge, encumbrance, charge, garnishment,  execution, or levy of any
kind, either voluntary or involuntary, and any attempt to anticipate,  alienate,
sell, transfer,  assign,  pledge,  encumber,  charge or otherwise dispose of any
rights to benefits payable under the plan shall be void.

                                       10



         Plan  Loans.  You may  borrow  money  from the  vested  portion of your
         -----------
account.  The minimum amount you may borrow is $1,000. The maximum amount is 50%
of your vested account balance. You may never borrow more than $50,000 minus the
highest outstanding balance on any individual loan during the last 12 months.

         You may take up to five years to repay a general  purpose  loan. If you
are using the loan to purchase your primary residence,  a repayment period of 15
years is permissible. You must repay the loan through payroll deductions.

         If you fail to make any loan  repayment  when due, your loan will be in
default.  The full amount of the loan will be due and payable by the last day of
the calendar quarter  following the calendar quarter which contains the due date
of the last monthly installment  payment. If the outstanding balance of the loan
is in default and is not repaid in the  aforementioned  time period, you will be
considered to have received a distribution of said amount.

Administration of the Plan

         Effective October 1, 2004, Kearny will administer the plan. The Bank of
New York will serve as trustee and custodian for all investment  funds under the
plan except the Employer  Stock Fund.  John N.  Hopkins,  John Mazur and Matthew
McClane will serve as trustees  with  respect to the Employer  Stock Fund during
the initial public offering by Kearny  Financial Corp. After the stock of Kearny
Financial Corp.  begins  trading,  the Bank of New York also will be the trustee
for the Employer  Stock Fund.  The plan  administrator  is  responsible  for the
administration  of the  plan,  interpretation  of the  provisions  of the  plan,
prescribing  procedures for filing  applications  for benefits,  preparation and
distribution  of information  explaining the plan,  maintenance of plan records,
books of account and all other data necessary for the proper  administration  of
the plan, and preparation and filing of all returns and reports  relating to the
plan which are  required to be filed with the U.S.  Department  of Labor and the
IRS, and for all disclosures required to be made to participants,  beneficiaries
and others under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.

         The trustee  receives and holds the  contributions to the plan in trust
and distributes  them to participants  and  beneficiaries in accordance with the
terms of the plan and the directions of the plan  administrator.  The trustee is
responsible  for investment of the assets of the trust.  The address of the plan
administrator  and  the  trustee  for the  Employer  Stock  Fund  is  401k  Plan
Administrator  c/o Kearny Federal Savings Bank, 120 Passaic  Avenue,  Fairfield,
New Jersey  07004.  The address of the Bank of New York is One Wall Street,  New
York, New York, 10286.

Reports to Plan Participants

         The plan  administrator will furnish to each participant a statement at
least quarterly showing:

o    the balance in your account as of the end of that period;

o    the amount of contributions allocated to your account for that period; and

o    the adjustments to your account to reflect earnings or losses (if any).

                                       11



         If you invest in the Employer  Stock Fund, you will also receive a copy
of Kearny Financial  Corp.'s Annual Report to Stockholders and a proxy statement
related to stockholder meetings.

Amendment and Termination

         It is the  intention  of  Kearny  to  continue  the plan  indefinitely.
Nevertheless,  Kearny,  within its sole discretion may terminate the plan at any
time. If the plan is terminated  in whole or in part,  then  regardless of other
provisions in the plan, you will have a fully vested  interest in your accounts.
Kearny  reserves  the  right  to  make,  from  time to time,  any  amendment  or
amendments  to the plan  that do not cause any part of the trust to be used for,
or diverted to, any purpose other than the exclusive  benefit of participants or
their beneficiaries;  provided,  however,  that Kearny may make any amendment it
determines necessary or desirable, with or without retroactive effect, to comply
with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.

Merger, Consolidation, or Transfer

         In the event of the merger or  consolidation  of the plan with  another
plan,  or the transfer of the trust assets to another  plan,  the plan  requires
that each  participant  would  (if  either  the plan or the  other  plan then be
terminated)  receive a benefit immediately after the merger,  consolidation,  or
transfer  that is equal to or greater than the benefit he or she would have been
entitled to receive  immediately before the merger,  consolidation,  or transfer
(if the plan had then terminated).

Federal Income Tax Consequences

         The following  discussion  is only a brief  summary of certain  federal
income  tax  aspects  of the plan.  You  should  not rely on this  summary  as a
complete  or  definitive   description  of  the  material   federal  income  tax
consequences  relating to the plan. At the time you receive a distribution  from
the plan,  you will receive a tax notice  which  conforms to the IRS safe harbor
explanation of the  distribution in accordance  with IRS Notice 2002-3.  The tax
rules that affect your benefits  under the plan change  frequently  and may vary
based on your individual situation. This summary also does not discuss how state
or local tax laws affect  your plan  benefits.  We urge you to consult  your tax
advisor  with  respect  to any  distribution  from  the  plan  and  transactions
involving the plan.

         Federal tax law provides the participants  under the plan with a number
of special benefits:

         (1) you pay no  current  income  tax on your  contributions  or  Kearny
contributions; and

         (2) the  earnings  on your  plan  accounts  are not  taxable  until you
receive a distribution.

         These benefits are  conditioned on the plan's  compliance  with special
requirements  of federal  tax law.  We intend to  satisfy  all of the rules that
apply to the plan.  However,  if the rules are not  satisfied,  the  special tax
benefits available to the plan may be lost.

         Special  Distribution  Rules.  If you turned 50 before 1986, you may be
eligible to spread the taxes on the  distribution  over as much as 10 years. You
should  consult  with your tax advisor to determine if you are eligible for this
special tax benefit and whether it is appropriate to your financial needs.

         Kearny Financial Corp.  Common Stock Included in Lump Sum Distribution.
If a distribution of all of your benefits  includes  shares of Kearny  Financial
Corp. common stock, you will generally not

                                       12



be taxed on the increase in the value of the stock since its purchase  until you
sell the  stock.  You will be taxed on the amount of the  distribution  equal to
your original cost for the stock when you receive your distribution.

         Distributions: Rollovers and Direct Transfers to Another Qualified Plan
or to an IRA. You may roll over  virtually  all  distributions  from the plan to
retirement programs sponsored by other employers or to an individual  retirement
account.  We will provide you with  detailed  information  on how to roll over a
distribution when you are eligible to receive benefits under the plan.

Restrictions on Resale

         If you are an "affiliate" of Kearny  Financial  Corp. or Kearny Federal
Savings Bank, you may be subject to special rules under federal  securities laws
that affect your  ability to sell  shares you hold in the  Employer  Stock Fund.
Directors,  officers and substantial  shareholders of Kearny Financial Corp. are
generally  considered  "affiliates."  Any  person who may be an  "affiliate"  of
Kearny may wish to consult with  counsel  before  transferring  any common stock
they own. If you are not considered an "affiliate" of Kearny you may freely sell
any shares of Kearny Financial Corp.  common stock  distributed to you under the
plan, either publicly or privately.

Additional Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA") Considerations

         As noted  above,  the Plan is subject to certain  provisions  of ERISA,
including  special  provisions  relating  to control  over the Plan's  assets by
participants and beneficiaries. The Plan's feature that allows you to direct the
investment of your account  balances is intended to satisfy the  requirements of
section 404(c) of ERISA relating to control over plan assets by a participant or
beneficiary.  The effect of this is  two-fold.  First,  you will not be deemed a
"fiduciary" because of your exercise of investment discretion. Second, no person
who  otherwise  is a  fiduciary,  such  as  Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  the  Plan
administrator,   or  the   Plan's   trustee  is  liable   under  the   fiduciary
responsibility  provision of ERISA for any loss which results form your exercise
of control over the assets in your Plan account.

         Because  you will be  entitled  to invest  all of or a portion  of your
account  balance  in the  Plan in  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  common  stock,  the
regulations  under Section  404(c) of the ERISA require that the Plan  establish
procedures that ensure the  confidentiality of your decision to purchase,  hold,
or sell  employer  securities,  except to the  extent  that  disclosure  of such
information  is necessary to comply with federal or state laws not  preempted by
ERISA.  These  regulations also require that your exercise of voting and similar
rights with  respect to the common  stock to be  conducted in a way that ensures
the confidentiality of your exercise of these rights.

SEC Reporting and Short-Swing Profit Liability

         Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 imposes reporting and
liability requirements on officers,  directors,  and persons beneficially owning
more than 10% of public companies such as Kearny  Financial Corp.  Section 16(a)
of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934  requires  the  filing of  reports  of
beneficial ownership.  Within 10 days of becoming an officer, director or person
beneficially  owning more than 10% of the shares of Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  a
Form 3 reporting initial beneficial  ownership must be filed with the Securities
and Exchange  Commission.  Changes in beneficial  ownership,  such as purchases,
sales and gifts  generally  must be  reported  periodically,  either on a Form 4
within 2 business days after the change  occurs,  or annually on a Form 5 within
45 days after the close of Kearny Financial  Corp.'s fiscal year.  Discretionary
transactions in and beneficial ownership of the Common Stock through

                                       13



the Kearny  Financial  Corp.  Stock Fund of the Plan by officers,  directors and
persons  beneficially  owning  more  than  10% of the  common  stock  of  Kearny
Financial  Corp.  generally  must be reported  to the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission by such individuals.

         In addition to the  reporting  requirements  described  above,  section
16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 provides for the recovery by Kearny
Financial  Corp.  of profits  realized  by an  officer,  director  or any person
beneficially  owning  more than 10% of Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  common  stock
resulting from non-exempt purchases and sales of Kearny Financial Corp.'s common
stock within any six-month period.

         The Securities  and Exchange  Commission has adopted rules that provide
exemptions  from  the  profit  recovery  provisions  of  section  16(b)  for all
transactions in employer  securities  within an employee benefit plan,  provided
certain requirements are met. These requirements  generally involve restrictions
upon the timing of  elections to acquire or dispose of employer  securities  for
the accounts of section 16(b) persons.

         Except  for  distributions  of common  stock due to death,  disability,
retirement,  termination of employment or under a qualified  domestic  relations
order,  persons  affected by section 16(b) are required to hold shares of Common
Stock  distributed from the Plan for six months following such  distribution and
are prohibited  form directing  additional  purchases of units within the Kearny
Financial Corp. stock fund for six months after receiving such a distribution.

Additional Information

         This  prospectus  supplement  dated  December 28, 2004,  is part of the
prospectus of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  dated December 28, 2004. This prospectus
supplement shall be delivered to plan participants  together with the prospectus
and is not complete unless it is accompanied by the prospectus.

                                 LEGAL OPINIONS

         The validity of the issuance of the common stock will be passed upon by
Malizia Spidi & Fisch, PC, Washington,  D.C., which acted as special counsel for
Kearny  Financial Corp. in connection with the initial public offering by Kearny
Financial Corp.

                                       14



                      Appendix-A: Investment Election Form





                                                                      Appendix-A
                                                                      ----------


                           KEARNY FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK
              EMPLOYEES' SAVINGS AND PROFIT SHARING PLAN AND TRUST


                 ----------------------------------------------

                 Participant Voluntary Investment Election Form
                                                                          
                 ----------------------------------------------


Name of Plan Participant:                                            
                           ------------------------------------------


Social Security Number:                                              
                           ------------------------------------------

1.       Instructions.
         ------------

         In  connection  with the initial  public  offering of Kearny  Financial
Corp., Kearny has adopted the Kearny Federal Savings Bank Employees' Savings and
Profit  Sharing Plan and Trust to permit plan  participants  to direct all, or a
portion,  of the assets  attributable to their  participant  accounts into a new
fund:  the  Employer  Stock Fund.  The assets  attributable  to a  participant's
account  that are  transferred  at the  direction  of the  participant  into the
Employer  Stock Fund will be used to purchase  shares of common  stock of Kearny
Financial  Corp. to be issued in the initial stock offering of Kearny  Financial
Corp.

         To direct a  transfer  of all or a part of the funds  credited  to your
account to the Employer Stock Fund, you should  complete this form and return it
to  Kim  Manfredo  at  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank,  at 120  Passaic  Avenue,
Fairfield,  New Jersey 07004 who will retain this form and return a copy to you.
If you need any assistance in completing this form,  please contact Kim Manfredo
at (973)  244-4554.  If you do not  complete and return this form by January 21,
2005, at noon,  the funds  credited to your account under the plan will continue
to be  invested  in  accordance  with your  prior  investment  direction,  or in
accordance  with  the  terms  of the plan if no  investment  direction  has been
provided.

2.       Investment Directions.
         ---------------------

          As a participant in the plan, I hereby voluntarily elect to direct the
trustee of the plan to invest the below  indicated  dollar sum of my participant
account balance under the plan as indicated below.

         I hereby  voluntarily  elect and  request to direct  investment  of the
below indicated  dollar amount of my participant  account funds for the purchase
of the common stock to be issued in Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s initial  offering
(minimum investment of $250.00; rounded to the nearest $10.00 increment; maximum
investment   permissible   is  50,000  shares  of  common  stock  or  $500,000):
$___________.  Enter your $ level of requested  purchase  through the plan. Such
amount may not exceed the vested  portion of assets held under the plan for you.
Please note that the actual  number of shares of common stock  purchased on your
behalf under the plan may be limited or reduced in  accordance  with the plan of
stock issuance of Kearny  Financial Corp.  based upon the total number of shares
of common stock  subscribed  for by other parties.  On the attached  Appendix-B,
please indicate from which funds such  investments  should be transferred.  Only
available funds may be used for purchase.



         All other  funds in my  participant  account  will  remain  invested as
previously  requested.  All future contributions under the plan will continue to
be invested as previously requested or as revised by me at a later date.

3.       Acknowledgment.
         --------------

         I fully  understand that this  self-directed  portion of my participant
account  does  not  share  in the  overall  net  earnings,  gains,  losses,  and
appreciation  or  depreciation  in the value of assets held by the plan's  other
investment funds, but only in my account's  allocable portion of such items from
the directed  investment account invested in the common stock. I understand that
the  plan's  trustee,  in  complying  with this  election  and in  following  my
directions for the investment of my account, is not responsible or liable in any
way for the  expenses  or  losses  that may be  incurred  by my  account  assets
invested in common stock under the Employer Stock Fund.

         I  further   understand  that  this  one  time  election  shall  become
irrevocable by me upon execution and submission of this  Investment  Form.  Only
                                                                            ----
properly  signed forms  delivered  to the plan trustee on or before  January 21,
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005, at noon, will be honored.
-------------------------------

         The undersigned  participant  acknowledges  that he or she has received
the  prospectus of the Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  dated  December 28, 2004,  the
prospectus  supplement  dated  December 28, 2004,  regarding the Kearny  Federal
Savings Bank Employees'  Savings and Profit Sharing Plan and Trust as adopted by
Kearny Federal  Savings Bank and this Investment  Form. The  undersigned  hereby
acknowledges  that the  shares of common  stock to be  purchased  with the funds
noted  above are not savings  accounts  or  deposits  and are not insured by the
Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation,   Bank  Insurance  Fund,  the  Savings
Association Insurance Fund, or any other governmental agency.  Investment in the
common stock will expose the  undersigned to the investment  risks and potential
fluctuations  in the market price of the common stock.  Investment in the common
stock does not offer any guarantees regarding maintenance of the principal value
of such investment or any projections or guarantees associated with future value
or dividend  payments with respect to the common stock.  The undersigned  hereby
voluntarily  makes and  consents to this  investment  election  and  voluntarily
signed  his (her) name as of the date  listed  below.  If you so elect,  you may
choose not to make any investment decision at this time.

I UNDERSTAND  THAT BY EXECUTING THIS ORDER I DO NOT WAIVE ANY RIGHTS AFFORDED TO
ME BY THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 OR THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.



                                                                         
--------------------       ----------           ------------------------                ---------
Witness                    Date                       Participant                        Date


For the Trustee                                       For the Plan Administrator

--------------------       ----------           ------------------------                ---------
                           Date                                                         Date



                                        2



                Appendix-B: Change of Investment Allocation Form



                                                                      Appendix-B
                                                                      ----------

                      Change of Investment Allocation Form

Kearny Financial Corp.

CHANGE OF INVESTMENT ALLOCATION
-------------------------------

1.  Member Data

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Print your full name above (Last, first, middle initial)  Social Security Number

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Street Address             City                 Zip

2.  Instructions

Kearny Federal Savings Bank Employees' Savings and Profit Sharing Plan and Trust
is giving members a special  opportunity to invest their 401(k) account balances
in a new  investment  fund - the  Employer  Stock  Fund  -  which  is  comprised
primarily of common stock issued by Kearny  Financial  Corp. in connection  with
the initial  stock  offering  of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  The  percentage  of a
member's  account  transferred  at the direction of the member into the Employer
Stock  Fund will be used to  purchase  shares of the  common  stock  during  the
initial offering of Kearny Financial Corp.  Please review the prospectus and the
prospectus supplement before making any decision.

In the event of an oversubscription in the offering so that the total amount you
allocate to the  Employer  Stock Fund can not be used by the trustee to purchase
the common stock, your account will be reinvested in the other funds of the plan
as  previously  directed  in your last  investment  election.  If no  investment
election is provided, your account will be invested in the Money Market Fund.

Investing  in the common  stock  entails  some risks,  and we  encourage  you to
discuss this investment  decision with your spouse and investment  advisor.  The
plan  trustee  and the  plan  administrator  are  not  authorized  to  make  any
representations  about this investment other than what appears in the prospectus
and prospectus supplement, and you should not rely on any information other than
what is contained in the prospectus and prospectus supplement.  For a discussion
of certain factors that should be considered by each member in deciding  whether
to invest in the common stock,  see "Risk  Factors"  beginning on page 12 of the
prospectus.  Any shares  purchased by the plan pursuant to your election will be
subject to the  conditions or  restrictions  otherwise  applicable to the common
stock, as discussed in the prospectus and prospectus supplement.

3.  Investment Directions   (Applicable to Accumulated Balances Only)

To direct a transfer of all or part of the funds  credited  to your  accounts to
the  Employer  Stock  Fund,  you  should  complete  and file  this form with Kim
Manfredo, of Kearny Federal Savings Bank no later than January 21, 2005 at noon.
If you need any assistance in completing this form,  please contact Kim Manfredo
at (973)  244-4554.  If you do not complete and return this form to Kim Manfredo
by January 21, 2005 at noon,  the funds  credited to your account under the plan
will continue to be invested in accordance with your prior investment direction,
or in accordance with the terms of the plan if no investment  direction has been
provided by you.




         Notwithstanding  the election made in  Appendix-A  for purchases of the
Employer  Stock Fund,  your  purchase of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  Stock will be
limited to the amounts  available in the  following  funds.  No purchases of the
Employer Stock Fund will be made with insufficient funds in any funds.

I hereby revoke any previous investment direction and now direct that the market
value of the units that I have  invested in the following  funds,  to the extent
permissible,  be  transferred  out of the  specified  fund and  invested  in the
Employer Stock Fund as follows:



                                                            Dollar Amount
                                                                to be
                     Fund                                    transferred

S&P 500 Stock Fund....................................         __________

Russell 2000 Stock Fund...............................         __________

S&P 500/Growth Stock Fund.............................         __________

S&P 500/Value Stock Fund..............................         __________

Stable Value Fund.....................................         __________

S&P MidCap Stock Fund.................................         __________

Money Market Fund.....................................         __________

Government Bond Fund..................................         __________

International Stock Fund..............................         __________

Income Plus Fund......................................         __________

Growth & Income Fund..................................         __________

Growth Fund...........................................         __________

Nasdaq 100 Stock Fund.................................         __________

          Total (Important!)..........................         __________


(The Total should equal the total dollar amount on Page 1 of Appendix-A.)

Note:  The total  amount  transferred  may not  exceed  the total  value of your
accounts.

4.  Investment  Directions  (Applicable to Future  Contributions  Only) I hereby
revoke any  previous  investment  instructions  and now  direct  that any future
contributions  and/or  loan  repayments,  if any,  made by me or on my behalf by
Kearny Financial Corp.  including those contributions and/or repayments received
by Kearny Federal  Savings Bank  Employees'  Savings and Profit Sharing Plan and
Trust  during  the same  reporting  period  as this  form,  be  invested  in the
following funds (in whole percentages). If I elect to invest in the common stock
of Kearny Financial Corp., such future contributions or loan repayments, if any,
will be invested in the Employer  Stock Fund the month  following the conclusion
of the  stock  offering.  Please  read  "Notes"  on the  following  page  before
completing.

                                        2




                 Fund                               Percentage
                 ----                               ----------
S&P 500 Stock Fund...................................  ____  %

Russell 2000 Stock Fund..............................  ____  %

S&P 500/Growth Stock Fund............................  ____  %

S&P 500/Value Stock Fund.............................  ____  %

Stable Value Fund....................................  ____  %

S&P MidCap Stock Fund................................  ____  %

Money Market Fund....................................  ____  %

Government Bond Fund.................................  ____  %

International Stock Fund.............................  ____  %

Income Plus Fund.....................................  ____  %

Growth & Income Fund.................................  ____  %

Growth Fund..........................................  ____  %

Employer Stock Fund..................................  ____  %

Nasdaq 100 Stock Fund................................  ____  %

       Total (Important!)............................  100%

         Notes: No amounts  invested in the Stable Value Fund may be transferred
         directly to the Money Market Fund.  Stable Value Fund amounts  invested
         in the S&P 500 Stock  Fund,  Russell  2000 Stock Fund,  S&P  500/Growth
         Stock Fund, S&P 500/Value Stock Fund, S&P MidCap Stock Fund, Government
         Bond Fund,  International Stock Fund, Income Plus Fund, Growth & Income
         Fund,  Growth Fund,  Nasdaq 100 Stock Fund and/or  Employer Stock Fund,
         for a period of three  months may be  transferred  to the Money  Market
         Fund upon the submission of a separate Change of Investment  Allocation
         Form. The  percentage  that can be transferred to the Money Market Fund
         may be limited by any amounts  previously  transferred  from the Stable
         Value Fund that have not  satisfied the equity wash  requirement.  Such
         amounts  will  remain in either the S&P 500 Stock  Fund,  Russell  2000
         Stock Fund,  S&P 500/Growth  Stock Fund, S&P 500/Value  Stock Fund, S&P
         MidCap  Stock Fund,  Government  Bond Fund,  International  Stock Fund,
         Income Plus Fund,  Growth & Income Fund,  Growth Fund, Nasdaq 100 Stock
         Fund and/or  Employer  Stock Fund and a separate  direction to transfer
         them to the  Money  Market  Fund  will be  required  when  they  become
         available.

5.  Participant Signature and Acknowledgment - Required

By signing this Change of Investment Allocation form, I authorize and direct the
plan administrator and trustee to carry out my instructions. If investing in the
Employer  Stock Fund, I  acknowledge  that I have been  provided with and read a
copy of the prospectus and prospectus supplement relating to the issuance of the
common stock.  I am aware of the risks  involved in the investment in the common
stock,  and  understand  that  the  trustee  and  plan   administrator  are  not
responsible for my choice of investment.

                                        3



MEMBER'S SIGNATURE

I understand that the above directed  change(s) will be processed  within one to
five days of the form being received by Pentegra. I further understand that if I
do not  complete  either  Section 3 or Section  4, no change  will be made to my
current   directions  for  future   contributions   or   accumulated   balances,
respectively.


---------------------------------------                 -------------------
Signature of Member                                            Date

Pentegra Services,  Inc. is hereby authorized to make the above listed change(s)
to this member's record.

On behalf of the above named member,  I certify that the signature above is that
of the participant making this request.



---------------------------------------                 -------------------
Signature of Kearny Federal Savings Bank                       Date
Authorized Representative





Please complete and return by noon on January 21, 2005



                                        4



             Appendix-C: Special Tax Notice Regarding Plan Payments



                                                                      Appendix-C
                                                                      ----------

                   SPECIAL TAX NOTICE REGARDING PLAN PAYMENTS

         This notice  explains how you can continue to defer federal  income tax
on your retirement savings in the Kearny Federal Savings Bank Employees' Savings
and  Profit  Sharing  Plan  and  Trust  (the  "Plan")  and  contains   important
information you will need before you decide how to receive your Plan benefits.

         This  notice is provided to you by Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank (your
"Plan  Administrator")  because  all or part of the  payment  that you will soon
receive  from  the  Plan  may be  eligible  for  rollover  by you or  your  Plan
Administrator to a traditional IRA or an eligible employer plan. A rollover is a
payment  by you or the  Plan  Administrator  of all or part of your  benefit  to
another  plan or IRA that allows you to  continue  to postpone  taxation of that
benefit  until it is paid to you.  Your payment  cannot be rolled over to a Roth
IRA, a SIMPLE IRA, or a Coverdell  Education  Savings Account (formerly known as
an education  IRA). An "eligible  employer plan" includes a plan qualified under
section  401(a)  of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code,   including  a  401(k)  plan,
profit-sharing  plan, defined benefit plan, stock bonus plan, and money purchase
plan; a section 403(a) annuity plan; a section 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity; and
an  eligible   section  457(b)  plan  maintained  by  a  governmental   employer
(governmental 457 plan).

         An eligible employer plan is not legally required to accept a rollover.
Before you decide to roll over your payment to another employer plan, you should
find  out  whether  the  plan  accepts  rollovers  and,  if  so,  the  types  of
distributions  it accepts  as a  rollover.  You  should  also find out about any
documents  that are  required to be  completed  before the  receiving  plan will
accept  a  rollover.  Even if a plan  accepts  rollovers,  it might  not  accept
rollovers of certain types of distributions,  such as after-tax amounts. If this
is the case, and your  distribution  includes  after-tax  amounts,  you may wish
instead  to roll  your  distribution  over to a  traditional  IRA or split  your
rollover  amount between the employer plan in which you will  participate  and a
traditional  IRA.  If an  employer  plan  accepts  your  rollover,  the plan may
restrict  subsequent  distributions  of the rollover  amount or may require your
spouse's consent for any subsequent distribution. A subsequent distribution from
the plan that  accepts  your  rollover  may also be  subject  to  different  tax
treatment than distributions from this Plan. Check with the administrator of the
plan that is to receive your rollover prior to making the rollover.

         If you have  additional  questions  after reading this notice,  you can
contact your plan administrator, Albert Gossweiler at (973) 244-4509.

         SUMMARY

         There are two ways you may be able to  receive a Plan  payment  that is
eligible for rollover:

         (1) Certain payments can be made directly to a traditional IRA that you
establish  or to an eligible  employer  plan that will accept it and hold it for
your benefit ("DIRECT ROLLOVER"); or

         (2) The payment can be PAID TO YOU.

                                        1



         If you choose a DIRECT ROLLOVER:

         *        Your  payment  will not be taxed  in the  current  year and no
                  income tax will be withheld.

         *        You choose  whether your payment will be made directly to your
                  traditional  IRA or to an eligible  employer plan that accepts
                  your  rollover.  Your payment  cannot be rolled over to a Roth
                  IRA, a SIMPLE IRA, or a Coverdell  Education  Savings  Account
                  because these are not traditional IRAs.

         *        The taxable  portion of your  payment will be taxed later when
                  you  take  it  out  of the  traditional  IRA  or the  eligible
                  employer  plan.  Depending  on the  type of  plan,  the  later
                  distribution may be subject to different tax treatment than it
                  would be if you  received  a  taxable  distribution  from this
                  Plan.

         If you choose to have a Plan payment that is eligible for rollover PAID
TO YOU:

         *        You  will  receive  only  80% of  the  taxable  amount  of the
                  payment,   because  the  Plan  Administrator  is  required  to
                  withhold  20% of that  amount and send it to the IRS as income
                  tax withholding to be credited against your taxes.

         *        The  taxable  amount  of your  payment  will be  taxed  in the
                  current   year  unless  you  roll  it  over.   Under   limited
                  circumstances,  you may be able to use  special tax rules that
                  could  reduce the tax you owe.  However,  if you  receive  the
                  payment  before age 59 1/2, you may have to pay an  additional
                  10% tax.

         *        You can roll over all or part of the  payment  by paying it to
                  your  traditional  IRA or to an  eligible  employer  plan that
                  accepts  your  rollover  within 60 days after you  receive the
                  payment.  The amount  rolled  over will not be taxed until you
                  take it out of the  traditional  IRA or the eligible  employer
                  plan.

         *        If you want to roll over 100% of the payment to a  traditional
                  IRA or an eligible employer plan, you must find other money to
                  replace the 20% of the taxable  portion that was withheld.  If
                  you roll  over  only the 80%  that you  received,  you will be
                  taxed  on the 20%  that was  withheld  and that is not  rolled
                  over.

         YOUR RIGHT TO WAIVE THE 30-DAY NOTICE PERIOD. Generally, neither a
direct  rollover  nor a payment can be made from the Plan until at least 30 days
after your receipt of this notice.  Thus, after receiving this notice,  you have
at least 30 days to  consider  whether or not to have your  withdrawal  directly
rolled  over.  If you do not wish to wait until this 30-day  notice  period ends
before your election is processed,  you may waive the notice period by making an
affirmative  election  indicating  whether  or not you  wish  to  make a  direct
rollover.  Your  withdrawal  will  then be  processed  in  accordance  with your
election as soon as practical after it is received by the Plan Administrator.

                                        2



MORE INFORMATION

I.    PAYMENTS THAT CAN AND CANNOT BE ROLLED OVER

II.   DIRECT ROLLOVER

III.  PAYMENT PAID TO YOU

IV.   SURVIVING SPOUSES, ALTERNATE PAYEES, AND OTHER BENEFICIARIES

      I.   PAYMENTS THAT CAN AND CANNOT BE ROLLED OVER

         Payments from the Plan may be "eligible rollover  distributions."  This
means  that  they can be  rolled  over to a  traditional  IRA or to an  eligible
employer plan that accepts rollovers. Payments from a plan cannot be rolled over
to a Roth IRA, a SIMPLE IRA, or a Coverdell Education Savings Account. Your Plan
Administrator  should be able to tell you what  portion  of your  payment  is an
eligible rollover distribution.

         The following types of payments cannot be rolled over:

         PAYMENTS SPREAD OVER LONG PERIODS. You cannot roll over a payment if it
is part of a series of equal (or almost  equal)  payments that are made at least
once a year and that will last for:

         *   your lifetime (or a period measured by your life expectancy), or

         *   your lifetime and your beneficiary's lifetime (or a period measured
             by your joint life expectancies), or

         *   a period of 10 years or more.

         REQUIRED  MINIMUM  PAYMENTS.  Beginning  when you  reach  age 70 1/2 or
retire,  whichever is later, a certain  portion of your payment cannot be rolled
over  because  it is a  "required  minimum  payment"  that  must be paid to you.
Special rules apply if you own more than 5% of your employer.

         HARDSHIP DISTRIBUTIONS. A hardship distribution cannot be rolled over.

         ESOP  DIVIDENDS.  Cash dividends paid directly to you on employer stock
held in an employee stock ownership plan cannot be rolled over.

         CORRECTIVE  DISTRIBUTIONS.  A  distribution  that is made to  correct a
failed  nondiscrimination  test or because legal limits on certain contributions
were exceeded cannot be rolled over.

                                        3



         LOANS TREATED AS DISTRIBUTIONS.  The amount of a plan loan that becomes
a  taxable  deemed  distribution  because  of a default  cannot be rolled  over.
However, a loan offset amount is eligible for rollover, as discussed in Part III
below.  Ask the Plan  Administrator  of this Plan if  distribution  of your loan
qualifies for rollover treatment.

         The Plan  Administrator of this Plan should be able to tell you if your
payment includes amounts which cannot be rolled over.

         II.      DIRECT ROLLOVER

         A DIRECT  ROLLOVER  is a direct  payment  of the  amount  of your  Plan
benefits to a traditional IRA or an eligible  employer plan that will accept it.
You can choose a DIRECT  ROLLOVER of all or any portion of your  payment that is
an eligible  rollover  distribution,  as described in Part I above.  You are not
taxed on any  taxable  portion  of your  payment  for which you  choose a DIRECT
ROLLOVER until you later take it out of the traditional IRA or eligible employer
plan. In addition, no income tax withholding is required for any taxable portion
of your Plan  benefits for which you choose a DIRECT  ROLLOVER.  This Plan might
not let you choose a DIRECT ROLLOVER if your distributions for the year are less
than $200.

         DIRECT ROLLOVER to a Traditional IRA. You can open a traditional IRA to
receive the direct rollover. If you choose to have your payment made directly to
a traditional IRA,  contact an IRA sponsor (usually a financial  institution) to
find out how to have your payment made in a direct rollover to a traditional IRA
at that  institution.  If you are unsure of how to invest  your  money,  you can
temporarily  establish a  traditional  IRA to receive the payment.  However,  in
choosing a traditional  IRA, you may wish to make sure that the  traditional IRA
you  choose  will  allow you to move all or a part of your  payment  to  another
traditional IRA at a later date, without penalties or other limitations. See IRS
Publication 590,  Individual  Retirement  Arrangements,  for more information on
traditional IRAs (including limits on how often you can roll over between IRAs).

         DIRECT  ROLLOVER to a Plan.  If you are employed by a new employer that
has an eligible  employer plan, and you want a direct rollover to that plan, ask
the plan  administrator  of that plan whether it will accept your  rollover.  An
eligible  employer  plan is not legally  required to accept a rollover.  Even if
your new  employer's  plan does not accept a  rollover,  you can choose a DIRECT
ROLLOVER to a traditional  IRA. If the employer plan accepts your rollover,  the
plan may provide  restrictions  on the  circumstances  under which you may later
receive a distribution  of the rollover amount or may require spousal consent to
any  subsequent  distribution.  Check with the plan  administrator  of that plan
before making your decision.

         DIRECT ROLLOVER of a Series of Payments.  If you receive a payment that
can be rolled over to a traditional  IRA or an eligible  employer plan that will
accept it, and it is paid in a series of payments  for less than 10 years,  your
choice to make or not make a DIRECT  ROLLOVER  for a payment  will  apply to all
later  payments in the series  until you change your  election.  You are free to
change your election for any later payment in the series.

         CHANGE IN TAX TREATMENT RESULTING FROM A DIRECT ROLLOVER. The
tax treatment of any payment from the eligible  employer plan or traditional IRA
receiving  your DIRECT  ROLLOVER  might be different  than if you received  your
benefit in a taxable distribution

                                        4



directly from the Plan.  For example,  if you were born before  January 1, 1936,
you might be  entitled to  ten-year  averaging  or capital  gain  treatment,  as
explained  below.  However,  if you have your  benefit  rolled over to a section
403(b) tax-sheltered annuity, a governmental 457 plan, or a traditional IRA in a
DIRECT  ROLLOVER,  your  benefit  will no longer be  eligible  for that  special
treatment.  See the sections below entitled "Additional 10% Tax if You Are under
Age 59 1/2" and "Special Tax Treatment if You Were Born before January 1, 1936."

         III.     PAYMENT PAID TO YOU

         If your  payment  can be rolled over (see Part I above) and the payment
is made to you in cash, it is subject to 20% federal  income tax  withholding on
the taxable portion (state tax withholding may also apply). The payment is taxed
in the  year you  receive  it  unless,  within  60  days,  you roll it over to a
traditional IRA or an eligible employer plan that accepts  rollovers.  If you do
not roll it over, special tax rules may apply.

         Income Tax Withholding:

         MANDATORY  WITHHOLDING.  If any  portion of your  payment can be rolled
over under Part I above and you do not elect to make a DIRECT ROLLOVER, the Plan
is required by law to withhold 20% of the taxable amount. This amount is sent to
the IRS as federal income tax withholding.  For example,  if you can roll over a
taxable  payment of  $10,000,  only  $8,000 will be paid to you because the Plan
must withhold  $2,000 as income tax.  However,  when you prepare your income tax
return for the year,  unless you make a rollover  within 60 days (see "Sixty-Day
Rollover  Option" below),  you must report the full $10,000 as a taxable payment
from the  Plan.  You must  report  the  $2,000 as tax  withheld,  and it will be
credited  against  any income tax you owe for the year.  There will be no income
tax withholding if your payments for the year are less than $200.

         VOLUNTARY  WITHHOLDING.  If any portion of your  payment is taxable but
cannot be rolled  over  under  Part I above,  the  mandatory  withholding  rules
described  above  do not  apply.  In  this  case,  you  may  elect  not to  have
withholding  apply to that portion.  If you do nothing,  an amount will be taken
out of this portion of your payment for federal income tax withholding. To elect
out of withholding, ask the Plan Administrator for the election form and related
information.

         SIXTY-DAY  ROLLOVER OPTION. If you receive a payment that can be rolled
over under Part I above,  you can still decide to roll over all or part of it to
a traditional IRA or to an eligible employer plan that accepts rollovers. If you
decide to roll over, you must  contribute the amount of the payment you received
to a traditional IRA or eligible  employer plan within 60 days after you receive
the  payment.  The portion of your payment that is rolled over will not be taxed
until you take it out of the traditional IRA or the eligible employer plan.

         You can roll over up to 100% of your  payment  that can be rolled  over
under Part I above,  including an amount equal to the 20% of the taxable portion
that was  withheld.  If you choose to roll over 100%,  you must find other money
within the 60-day period to contribute  to the  traditional  IRA or the eligible
employer  plan, to replace the 20% that was withheld.  On the other hand, if you
roll over only the 80% of the taxable  portion  that you  received,  you will be
taxed on the 20% that was withheld.

                                        5



         EXAMPLE:  The taxable  portion of your  payment that can be rolled over
under Part I above is $10,000,  and you choose to have it paid to you.  You will
receive  $8,000,  and $2,000 will be sent to the IRS as income tax  withholding.
Within 60 days after receiving the $8,000,  you may roll over the entire $10,000
to a traditional IRA or an eligible employer plan. To do this, you roll over the
$8,000 you received  from the Plan,  and you will have to find $2,000 from other
sources (your savings,  a loan,  etc.).  In this case, the entire $10,000 is not
taxed until you take it out of the traditional IRA or an eligible employer plan.
If you roll over the entire  $10,000,  when you file your  income tax return you
may get a refund of part or all of the $2,000 withheld.

         If, on the other hand,  you roll over only  $8,000,  the $2,000 you did
not roll over is taxed in the year it was  withheld.  When you file your  income
tax return, you may get a refund of part of the $2,000 withheld.  (However,  any
refund is likely to be larger if you roll over the entire $10,000.)

         ADDITIONAL  10%  TAX IF YOU ARE  UNDER  AGE 59 1/2.  If you  receive  a
payment  before  you  reach  age 59 1/2 and you do not  roll it over,  then,  in
addition  to the regular  income tax,  you may have to pay an extra tax equal to
10% of the taxable portion of the payment. The additional 10% tax generally does
not apply to (1)  payments  that are paid after you  separate  from service with
your  employer  during or after the year you reach age 55, (2) payments that are
paid because you retire due to  disability,  (3) payments that are paid as equal
(or almost equal)  payments over your life or life  expectancy (or your and your
beneficiary's  lives or life  expectancies),  (4) dividends paid with respect to
stock by an employee  stock  ownership  plan (ESOP) as described in Code section
404(k),  (5)  payments  that are paid  directly to the  government  to satisfy a
federal  tax levy,  (6)  payments  that are paid to an  alternate  payee under a
qualified  domestic  relations  order,  or (7)  payments  that do not exceed the
amount  of  your  deductible  medical  expenses.  See IRS  Form  5329  for  more
information on the additional 10% tax.

         SPECIAL TAX TREATMENT IF YOU WERE BORN BEFORE JANUARY 1, 1936.
If you receive a payment from a plan qualified under section 401(a) or a section
403(a)  annuity plan that can be rolled over under Part I and you do not roll it
over to a  traditional  IRA or an eligible  employer  plan,  the payment will be
taxed in the year you receive it. However,  if the payment  qualifies as a "lump
sum  distribution,"  it may be eligible  for special  tax  treatment.  (See also
"Employer  Stock or Securities",  below.) A lump sum  distribution is a payment,
within  one year,  of your  entire  balance  under the Plan (and  certain  other
similar plans of the employer) that is payable to you after you have reached age
59 1/2 or because you have separated from service with your employer (or, in the
case of a  self-employed  individual,  after you have reached age 59 1/2 or have
become disabled).  For a payment to be treated as a lump sum  distribution,  you
must have been a participant in the Plan for at least five years before the year
in which you received the  distribution.  The special tax treatment for lump sum
distributions that may be available to you is described below.

         TEN-YEAR AVERAGING. If you receive a lump sum distribution and you were
born before January 1, 1936, you can make a one-time  election to figure the tax
on the payment by using  "10-year  averaging"  (using 1986 tax rates).  Ten-year
averaging often reduces the tax you owe.

                                        6



         There  are other  limits  on the  special  tax  treatment  for lump sum
distributions.  For example,  you can generally elect this special tax treatment
only  once  in  your  lifetime,  and  the  election  applies  to  all  lump  sum
distributions that you receive in that same year. You may not elect this special
tax treatment if you rolled  amounts into this Plan from a 403(b)  tax-sheltered
annuity  contract,  a  governmental  457  plan,  or from  an IRA not  originally
attributable to a qualified  employer plan. If you have previously rolled over a
distribution  from this Plan (or certain other  similar plans of the  employer),
you cannot use this special  averaging  treatment  for later  payments  from the
Plan. If you roll over your payment to a traditional IRA, governmental 457 plan,
or  403(b)  tax-sheltered  annuity,  you  will  not be able to use  special  tax
treatment for later payments from that IRA, plan, or annuity.  Also, if you roll
over only a portion of your payment to a traditional IRA, governmental 457 plan,
or 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity, this special tax treatment is not available for
the rest of the payment.  See IRS Form 4972 for  additional  information on lump
sum distributions and how you elect the special tax treatment.

         EMPLOYER  STOCK OR  SECURITIES.  There is a special  rule for a payment
from the Plan that includes  employer stock (or other employer  securities).  To
use this special rule,  1) the payment must qualify as a lump sum  distribution,
as  described   above,   except  that  you  do  not  need  five  years  of  plan
participation,  or 2) the  employer  stock  included  in  the  payment  must  be
attributable to "after-tax" employee  contributions,  if any. Under this special
rule,  you  may  have  the  option  of not  paying  tax on the  "net  unrealized
appreciation" of the stock until you sell the stock. Net unrealized appreciation
generally is the  increase in the value of the employer  stock while it was held
by the Plan. For example, if employer stock was contributed to your Plan account
when the stock was worth $1,000 but the stock was worth $1,200 when you received
it, you would not have to pay tax on the $200  increase in value until you later
sold the stock.

         You may  instead  elect not to have the  special  rule apply to the net
unrealized appreciation.  In this case, your net unrealized appreciation will be
taxed in the year you  receive  the stock,  unless you roll over the stock.  The
stock can be rolled over to a traditional IRA or another eligible employer plan,
either in a direct rollover or a rollover that you make yourself. Generally, you
will no longer be able to use the special rule for net  unrealized  appreciation
if you roll the stock over to a  traditional  IRA or another  eligible  employer
plan.

         If you  receive  only  employer  stock in a payment  that can be rolled
over,  no amount  will be withheld  from the  payment.  If you  receive  cash or
property other than employer stock, as well as employer stock, in a payment that
can be rolled  over,  the 20%  withholding  amount  will be based on the  entire
taxable amount paid to you (including the value of the employer stock determined
by excluding the net unrealized appreciation). However, the amount withheld will
be limited to the cash or property (excluding employer stock) paid to you.

         If you receive employer stock in a payment that qualifies as a lump sum
distribution,  the special tax  treatment for lump sum  distributions  described
above  (such as  10-year  averaging)  also  may  apply.  See IRS  Form  4972 for
additional information on these rules.

         REPAYMENT  OF PLAN  LOANS.  If your  employment  ends  and you  have an
outstanding  loan from your Plan,  your employer may reduce (or  "offset")  your
balance in the Plan by the amount of the loan you have not repaid. The amount of
your loan offset is treated as a  distribution  to you at the time of the offset
and will be taxed unless you roll over an amount equal to the

                                        7



amount of your loan offset to another  qualified  employer plan or a traditional
IRA within 60 days of the date of the offset.  If the amount of your loan offset
is the only amount you receive or is treated as having received,  no amount will
be withheld from it. If you receive other  payments of cash or property from the
Plan, the 20% withholding amount will be based on the entire amount paid to you,
including the amount of the loan offset.  The amount withheld will be limited to
the  amount of other  cash or  property  paid to you  (other  than any  employer
securities).  The  amount of a  defaulted  plan  loan  that is a taxable  deemed
distribution cannot be rolled over.

         IV.      SURVIVING SPOUSES, ALTERNATE PAYEES, AND OTHER
BENEFICIARIES

         In  general,  the rules  summarized  above  that apply to  payments  to
employees  also apply to  payments  to  surviving  spouses of  employees  and to
spouses or former spouses who are "alternate payees." You are an alternate payee
if your  interest  in the Plan  results  from a  "qualified  domestic  relations
order,"  which is an order  issued  by a court,  usually  in  connection  with a
divorce or legal separation.

         If you are a surviving  spouse or an alternate payee, you may choose to
have a payment that can be rolled over, as described in Part I above,  paid in a
DIRECT ROLLOVER to a traditional IRA or to an eligible  employer plan or paid to
you.  If you  have  the  payment  paid to you,  you can  keep it or roll it over
yourself to a traditional  IRA or to an eligible  employer plan.  Thus, you have
the same choices as the employee.

         If you are a beneficiary  other than a surviving spouse or an alternate
payee, you cannot choose a direct rollover, and you cannot roll over the payment
yourself.

         If  you  are  a  surviving  spouse,  an  alternate  payee,  or  another
beneficiary,  your payment is generally  not subject to the  additional  10% tax
described in Part III above, even if you are younger than age 59 1/2.

         If  you  are  a  surviving  spouse,  an  alternate  payee,  or  another
beneficiary,  you may be able to use the  special  tax  treatment  for  lump sum
distributions  and the special rule for payments that include employer stock, as
described in Part III above.  If you receive a payment because of the employee's
death,  you may be able to treat the payment as a lump sum  distribution  if the
employee met the appropriate age requirements, whether or not the employee had 5
years of participation in the Plan.

         HOW TO OBTAIN ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

         This notice  summarizes only the federal (not state or local) tax rules
that might  apply to your  payment.  The rules  described  above are complex and
contain many  conditions  and  exceptions  that are not included in this notice.
Therefore, you may want to consult with the Plan Administrator or a professional
tax advisor before you take a payment of your benefits from your Plan. Also, you
can find  more  specific  information  on the tax  treatment  of  payments  from
qualified employer plans in IRS Publication 575, Pension and Annuity Income, and
IRS Publication 590, Individual Retirement Arrangements.  These publications are
available  from  your  local  IRS  office,  on the  IRS's  Internet  Web Site at
www.irs.gov, or by calling 1-800-TAX-FORMS.

                                        8


                                                Filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3)
                                                File No. 333-118815

PROSPECTUS

                             KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP.
                (Holding Company for Kearny Federal Savings Bank)

Up  to  18,975,000  Shares  of  Common  Stock  (subject  to  increase  to  up to
21,821,250 shares)
                                            

         Kearny Financial Corp. is offering common stock for sale. The shares we
are  offering  will  represent  30% of the  outstanding  common  stock of Kearny
Financial  Corp.  Kearny MHC, the federally  chartered  mutual  holding  company
parent of Kearny Financial Corp.,  will own 70% of the outstanding  common stock
of Kearny Financial Corp.  after  completion of this offering.  We have received
approval  to have our common  stock  listed for  trading on the Nasdaq  National
Market under the symbol "KRNY."

         If you are or were a depositor of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank or West
Essex Bank:

          o    You may have priority rights to purchase shares of common stock.

         If you are a  participant  in the Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank 401(k)
Savings and Profit Sharing Plan:

          o    You may direct that all or part of your current account  balances
               in this plan be invested in shares of common  stock.  You will be
               receiving   separately  a  supplement  to  this  prospectus  that
               describes your rights under this plan.

         If you fit  neither of the  categories  above,  but are  interested  in
purchasing shares of our common stock:

          o    You may have an  opportunity  to purchase  shares of common stock
               after priority orders are filled.

         We are offering up to  18,975,000  shares of common stock for sale on a
best efforts  basis,  subject to certain  conditions.  We must sell a minimum of
14,025,000 shares to complete the offering.  We may sell up to 21,821,250 shares
without  resoliciting  subscribers  as a result  of  regulatory  considerations,
demand for the shares or changes in market conditions.  The offering is expected
to expire at 12:00 noon,  Eastern  time, on January 28, 2005. We may extend this
expiration date without notice to you until March 14, 2005, unless the Office of
Thrift Supervision approves a later date.

         Sandler O'Neill & Partners, L.P. will use its best efforts to assist us
in our selling efforts,  but is not required to purchase any of the common stock
that is being offered for sale. Purchasers will not pay a commission to purchase
shares of common stock in the offering.  All shares offered for sale are offered
at a price of $10.00 per share.

         The  minimum  purchase  is  25  shares.  Once  submitted,   orders  are
irrevocable unless the offering is terminated or extended beyond March 14, 2005.
If the offering is extended  beyond March 14,  2005,  subscribers  will have the
right to  modify  or  rescind  their  purchase  orders.  Funds  received  before
completion  of the  offering  will be held in an  escrow  account  and will earn
interest at our passbook  savings rate.  If we terminate the offering,  or if we
extend the offering  beyond  March 14, 2005 and you rescind your order,  we will
promptly return your funds with interest.

                   This investment involves a degree of risk,
                   including the possible loss of principal.

                 Please read Risk Factors beginning on page 12.


                                OFFERING SUMMARY
                             Price Per Share: $10.00


                                                                                    Maximum, As
                                              Minimum             Maximum             Adjusted
                                              -------             -------             --------
                                                                                 
Number of shares....................        14,025,000          18,975,000           21,821,250
Gross proceeds......................      $140,250,000        $189,750,000         $218,212,500
Estimated offering expenses(1)......      $  2,585,000        $  3,041,000         $  3,303,000
Estimated net proceeds..............      $137,665,000        $186,709,000         $214,909,500
Estimated net proceeds per share....      $       9.82        $       9.84         $       9.85


--------------
(1)  Includes an underwriting  commission payable to Sandler O'Neill & Partners,
     L.P. of 1% of the aggregate amount of common stock sold in the subscription
     and community  offerings.  For  information  regarding  compensation  to be
     received  by  Sandler  O'Neill  &  Partners,   L.P.,  please  see  Plan  of
     Distribution/Marketing Arrangements on page 133.

         These  securities  are not  deposits  or savings  accounts  and are not
insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation or any other
governmental agency.

         Neither the  Securities and Exchange  Commission,  the Office of Thrift
Supervision,  nor any state  securities  regulator  has approved or  disapproved
these  securities or determined if this prospectus is accurate or complete.  Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

                        Sandler O'Neill & Partners, L.P.

  For assistance, please contact the stock information center at (866) 424-2161
                The date of this prospectus is December 28, 2004



                  [Map of branch locations]



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                           Page
                                                                           ----
Summary..................................................................     1
Risk Factors............................................................     12
A Warning About Forward-Looking Statements..............................     18
Selected Financial and Other Data.......................................     19
Use of Proceeds.........................................................     21
Our Policy Regarding Dividends .........................................     22
Market for the Stock....................................................     22
Capitalization..........................................................     23
Pro Forma Data..........................................................     24
Historical and Pro Forma Capital Compliance.............................     31
Management's Discussion and Analysis
     of Financial Condition and Results of Operations...................     33
Business of Kearny MHC..................................................     63
Business of Kearny Financial Corp.......................................     63
Business of Kearny Federal Savings Bank ................................     64
Regulation..............................................................     92
Taxation...............................................................     103
Management.............................................................     104
The Stock Offering.....................................................     118
Restrictions on Acquisition of Kearny Financial Corp....................    138
Description of Capital Stock............................................    140
Legal and Tax Opinions..................................................    141
Experts.................................................................    141
Registration Requirements...............................................    141
Where You Can Find Additional Information...............................    141
Index to Consolidated Financial Statements..............................    143



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                     SUMMARY

This summary  highlights  selected  information  from this  document and may not
contain all the  information  that is important to you. To understand  the stock
offering fully,  you should read this entire document  carefully,  including the
consolidated  financial  statements and the notes to the consolidated  financial
statements beginning on page F-1 of this document.

Kearny Financial Corp., Kearny MHC and Kearny Federal Savings Bank

         Kearny Financial Corp. is a  federally-chartered  corporation organized
in March 2001 for the purpose of acquiring  all of the capital stock that Kearny
Federal Savings Bank issued in its mutual holding company reorganization. Kearny
Financial Corp.'s principal executive offices are located at 120 Passaic Avenue,
Fairfield,  New  Jersey  07004  and the  telephone  number  is  (973)  244-4500.
Currently,  all of the outstanding  stock of Kearny Federal Savings Bank is held
by Kearny  Financial Corp. and all of the outstanding  stock of Kearny Financial
Corp. is held by Kearny MHC.

         Kearny MHC is a  federally-chartered  mutual  holding  company that was
formed in 2001 in connection  with the mutual  holding  company  reorganization.
Kearny MHC has not engaged in any  significant  business  since its formation in
2001. So long as Kearny MHC is in existence, it will at all times own a majority
of the  outstanding  stock of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  After  completion of the
offering,  Kearny MHC will own 70% of the outstanding  stock of Kearny Financial
Corp.  We  anticipate  that the  primary  business  activity of Kearny MHC going
forward will be to own a majority of Kearny Financial Corp.'s stock.

         Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank is a  federally-chartered  stock  savings
bank.  It was  originally  founded in 1884 and received  its federal  charter in
1941.  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's  deposits are  federally  insured by the
Savings  Association  Insurance  Fund as  administered  by the  Federal  Deposit
Insurance Corporation. Kearny Federal Savings Bank is regulated by the Office of
Thrift Supervision and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.  The Office of
Thrift  Supervision  also  regulates  Kearny MHC and Kearny  Financial  Corp. as
savings and loan holding companies.

         During recent years we have experienced significant growth,  completing
three whole bank  acquisitions and the assumption of deposits of a branch office
of another financial  institution.  These  transactions  added a total of $936.0
million in assets to Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  more than doubling total assets,
which grew from $793.2  million at June 30, 1998 to $1.90  billion at  September
30,  2004.  At  September  30,  2004,  we had  deposits  of  $1.51  billion  and
stockholders' equity of $297.8 million.

         Our  assets  are  invested  primarily  in  investment   securities  and
mortgage-backed  securities.  At September 30, 2004, the  securities  portfolios
totaled  $1.21  billion  while loans  receivable,  net of deferred  fees and the
allowance for loan losses,  were $515.2  million.  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank
offers  traditional  retail banking  services,  one- to four-family  residential
mortgage loans,  multi-family and commercial mortgage loans, construction loans,
commercial  business  loans and home  equity  loans and lines of credit.  Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank  currently  operates  from its main office in Kearny,  New
Jersey,  and  twenty-four  branch offices  located in Bergen,  Hudson,  Passaic,
Morris, Middlesex, Essex, Union and Ocean Counties, New Jersey.

The Corporate Structure Following the Offering.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.  is offering  shares  representing  30% of the
outstanding  stock  of  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  after  the  completion  of the
offering.  The shares are being offered to certain  depositors of Kearny Federal
Savings Bank, the employee stock  ownership plan of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank
and

                                        1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

possibly to the general public, to the extent shares are available.  See Persons
Who May Order Stock in the  Offering  on page 3 and  Conduct of the  Offering on
page 119.  Kearny MHC will own the  remaining  70% of the  outstanding  stock of
Kearny  Financial Corp. The following chart shows the corporate  structure after
completion of the stock offering.

          ----------             -----------------------------------------------
          Kearny MHC             Minority Stockholders of Kearny Financial Corp.
          ----------             -----------------------------------------------
             |                                  |
             |                                  |
             |   70%                            |  30%
             |                                  |
             |                                  |
             |                                  |
          ---------------------------------------------------
                        Kearny Financial Corp.
          ---------------------------------------------------
                                |
                                |
                                | 100%
                                |
                                |
          ---------------------------------------------------
                     Kearny Federal Savings Bank
          ---------------------------------------------------

Use of the Proceeds Raised from the Sale of Stock.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.  will  use 50% of the net  proceeds  from  the
offering  to  make a  capital  contribution  to  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank.
Concurrent  with the  offering,  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  will also lend Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank's  employee stock  ownership plan cash from  subscriptions
received to enable the plan to buy up to 8% of the shares sold in the  offering.
The balance of the proceeds will be retained by Kearny  Financial Corp. and used
for general  business  purposes,  which may include  investment  in  securities,
repurchasing  shares of its common  stock,  paying cash  dividends or supporting
acquisitions.

         The capital  contribution from Kearny Financial Corp. to Kearny Federal
Savings Bank will provide the bank with additional  equity  capital,  which will
support future growth and expanded operations. While Kearny Federal Savings Bank
currently  exceeds the regulatory  capital  requirements  to be considered  well
capitalized,  the sale of shares of Kearny Financial Corp. common stock, coupled
with the accumulation of earnings, less dividends or other reductions in capital
from year to year,  provides a means for the orderly  preservation and expansion
of our capital  base.  If we expand our  business as we currently  plan,  Kearny
Federal Savings Bank will need the additional capital to remain well capitalized
under regulatory capital requirements.

         The funds  received  by Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank will be used for
general  business   purposes,   including   originating   loans  and  purchasing
securities.  We intend to increase the balance of our loan portfolio relative to
the size of our securities portfolio,  however, such a change will take time and
in the near future our assets will continue to consist  primarily of securities.
We intend to continue investing in securities of the same type we currently hold
and to continue  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank's current mix of deposit and loan
products.

         In addition to building  our core  banking  business  through  internal
growth  and  de  novo  branching,  we  will  also  actively  consider  expansion
opportunities   such  as  the   acquisition  of  branches  and  other  financial
institutions. We do not, however, have any current understandings, agreements or
arrangements for expansion by the acquisition of any branches or other financial
institutions.  We may also pursue other business activities,  including possibly
offering asset management  services,  acquiring a title insurance company and/or
acquiring  a  mortgage  banking  operation.   There  are,  however,  no  current
understandings,  arrangements  or agreements for these  activities and we cannot
assure you that we will  commence such  activities.  See Use of Proceeds on page
21.

                                        2

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Persons Who May Order Stock in the Offering.

Note:  Subscription  rights are not transferable,  and persons with subscription
rights may not subscribe for shares for the benefit of any other person.  If you
violate this  prohibition,  you may lose your rights to purchase  shares and may
face criminal prosecution and/or other sanctions.

         We have  granted  rights to  subscribe  for shares of Kearny  Financial
Corp.  common stock in a subscription  offering to the following  persons in the
following order of priority:

o    Priority 1 -  depositors  of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank at the close of
     business  on March  31,  2003  with  deposits  of at least  $50.00.  Former
     depositors of West Essex Bank, which was acquired by Kearny Federal Savings
     Bank in July 2003, will be treated as Eligible  Account Holders if they had
     deposits with West Essex Bank at the close of business on March 31, 2003 of
     at least $50.00.

o    Priority  2 - the tax  qualified  employee  stock  benefit  plans of Kearny
     Federal Savings Bank.

o    Priority 3 -  depositors  of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank at the close of
     business on September 30, 2004 with deposits of at least $50.00.

o    Priority 4 -  depositors  of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank at the close of
     business on November 30, 2004.

         If we receive subscriptions for more shares than are to be sold in this
offering,  we may be unable to fill,  or may only  partially  fill,  your order.
Shares will be  allocated  in order of the  priorities  described  above under a
formula  outlined in the plan of stock  issuance.  If we increase  the number of
shares to be sold above 18,975,000, Kearny Federal Savings Bank's employee stock
ownership  plan  will have the  first  priority  right to  purchase  any  shares
exceeding  that amount to the extent that its  subscription  has not  previously
been  filled.  Any  shares  remaining  will be  allocated  in the  order  of the
priorities  described above. See The Stock Offering - Subscription  Offering and
Subscription Rights for a description of the allocation procedure.

         We may  offer  shares  not  sold in the  subscription  offering  to the
general public in a community offering.  In the community offering, we will give
a preference  first to natural  persons who reside in Bergen,  Hudson,  Passaic,
Morris,  Monmouth,  Middlesex,  Essex, Union and Ocean Counties, New Jersey, and
second to other residents of New Jersey.  This part of the offering may commence
concurrently  with the  subscription  offering  or any time  thereafter  and may
terminate at any time without notice but no later than March 14, 2005.

         Shares  not  sold in the  subscription  or  community  offering  may be
offered for sale in a syndicated community offering,  which would be an offering
to the  general  public on a best  efforts  basis  managed by Sandler  O'Neill &
Partners,  L.P.  This part of the  offering  may  terminate  at any time without
notice but no later than March 14, 2005.

         You  cannot  transfer  your  subscription  rights.  If you  attempt  to
transfer  your  rights,  you may lose the right to  purchase  shares  and may be
subject to criminal  prosecution  and/or other sanctions.  With the exception of
IRA and Keogh  account stock  purchases,  shares  purchased in the  subscription
offering  must be registered  in the names of all  depositors on the  qualifying
account(s).  Deleting names of depositors or adding  non-depositors or otherwise
altering the form of beneficial ownership of a qualifying account will result in
the loss of your subscription rights.

         We have the  right to reject  any  orders  for  stock in the  community
offering and syndicated  community  offering.  We have described the offering in
greater detail beginning on page 118.

                                        3

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Deadline for Ordering Stock.

         The subscription  offering will expire at 12:00 noon,  Eastern time, on
January 28, 2005. We may extend this  expiration  date without notice to you for
up to 45 days,  until March 14, 2005. Once submitted,  your order is irrevocable
unless the offering is extended beyond March 14, 2005. We may request permission
from the Office of Thrift  Supervision  to extend the offering  beyond March 14,
2005,  but in no event may the offering be extended  beyond June 7, 2006. If the
offering is extended  beyond March 14, 2005, we will notify each  subscriber and
subscribers   will  have  the  right  to  confirm,   modify  or  rescind   their
subscriptions.  If  an  affirmative  response  is  not  received  prior  to  the
expiration of the  resolicitation  period, a subscriber's  subscription  will be
cancelled and funds will be returned with interest.

         We may cancel the offering at any time prior to  completion.  If we do,
orders for common stock  already  submitted  will be canceled  and  subscribers'
funds will be returned with interest.

Purchase Limitations.

         Limitations  on the purchase of stock in the offering  have been set by
the plan of stock issuance adopted by our Board of Directors.  These limitations
include the following:

o    The minimum purchase is 25 shares.

o    The maximum number of shares of stock that any  individual (or  individuals
     through a single account) may purchase is 50,000 shares.

o    The  maximum  number of shares of stock that any  individual  may  purchase
     together with any associate or group of persons acting in concert is 75,000
     shares.

         If  determined  to be necessary or desirable by the Board of Directors,
the  plan may be  amended  by a  two-thirds  vote of the  full  Board,  with the
concurrence  of the  Office of Thrift  Supervision.  Thus,  we may  increase  or
decrease the purchase limitations.  In the event the maximum purchase limitation
is  increased,  persons  who  subscribed  for the maximum  will be notified  and
permitted to increase their subscription.

How to Purchase Stock in the Offering.

         If you want to place an order  for  shares  in the  offering,  you must
complete  an  original  stock  order form and send it to us  together  with full
payment.  You must sign the  certification  that is on the  reverse  side of the
stock order form.  We must  receive  your stock order form before the end of the
subscription offering or the end of the community offering, as appropriate. Once
we receive your order, you cannot cancel or change it without our consent.

         To ensure that we properly identify your subscription  rights, you must
provide on your stock order form all of the  information  requested  for each of
your deposit  accounts as of the  eligibility  dates. If you fail to do so, your
subscription may be reduced or rejected if the offering is oversubscribed.

         We may, in our sole discretion, reject orders received in the community
offering  either in whole or in part.  If your order is  rejected  in part,  you
cannot cancel the remainder of your order.

         You may pay for shares in the  subscription  offering or the  community
offering in any of the following ways:

o    In cash, if delivered in person.

                                        4

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

o    By check or money order made payable to Kearny Financial Corp.

o    By authorizing  withdrawal  from an account at Kearny Federal Savings Bank.
     To use funds in an IRA or Keogh account at Kearny Federal Savings Bank, you
     must transfer your account to an unaffiliated institution or broker. Please
     contact the stock information center as soon as possible for assistance.

         We will  pay  interest  on your  subscription  funds  from  the date we
receive  your funds until the offering is  completed  or  terminated.  All funds
authorized  for withdrawal  from deposit  accounts with us will earn interest at
the applicable  account rate until the offering is completed or terminated.  If,
as a result of a withdrawal  from a  certificate  of deposit,  the balance falls
below the minimum balance  requirement,  the remaining funds will be transferred
to a savings  account and will earn  interest at our  regular  passbook  savings
rate.  There  will  be  no  early   withdrawal   penalty  for  withdrawals  from
certificates  of  deposit  used  to  pay  for  stock.   Funds  received  in  the
subscription  offering  will be held in a segregated  deposit  account at Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank  established to hold funds received as payment for shares.
We may, at our  discretion,  determine  during the offering period that it is in
the best interest of Kearny Federal Savings Bank to hold  subscription  funds in
an escrow account at another insured financial  institution instead of at Kearny
Federal Savings Bank.

Receiving a Prospectus and an Order Form.

         The subscription  offering will expire at 12:00 noon,  Eastern time, on
January 28, 2005. We may extend this  expiration  date without notice to you for
up to 45 days,  until March 14, 2005.  If a community  offering is held,  it may
terminate at any time without notice but no later than March 14, 2005. To ensure
that each  purchaser in the  subscription  and  community  offerings  receives a
prospectus at least 48 hours before the expiration date, in accordance with Rule
15c2-8 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, no prospectus will be mailed any
later than five days prior to this expiration date or otherwise  distributed any
later than two days prior to this expiration  date.  Execution of the order form
will confirm  receipt of delivery in  accordance  with Rule 15c2-8.  Order forms
will only be distributed with a prospectus.

Conditions to Completing the Offering.

         We are  conducting  the  offering  under the terms of our plan of stock
issuance. We cannot complete the offering unless:

o    we sell at least the minimum number of shares offered; and

o    we  receive  the final  approval  of the  Office of Thrift  Supervision  to
     complete the offering.

How We Determined the Offering Range and the $10.00 Price Per Share.

         The independent appraisal by RP Financial, LC, dated as of November 26,
2004,  established  the pro forma market value of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  This
appraisal  was based on our financial  condition  and results of operations  and
considered  the  effect  of the  additional  capital  to be  raised in the stock
offering.  The per share  price was set at $10.00  because  it is the price most
commonly used in stock offerings involving mutual-to-stock conversions and stock
issuances  by  financial  institutions  in the mutual  holding  company  form of
organization.  After taking into account our current  financial  condition,  the
appraisal and our business  plans,  our Board of Directors  decided to offer for
sale to public  stockholders 30% of the total shares to be outstanding after the
offering, with the remaining 70% of the total shares to be outstanding after the
offering to be held by Kearny MHC, our parent mutual holding company.

         The  appraisal  incorporated  an  analysis  of a peer group of publicly
traded mid-tier thrift holding company  subsidiaries of mutual holding companies
that RP Financial deemed comparable to us. This

                                        5

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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

analysis  included an  evaluation  of the average and median  price-to-earnings,
price-to-book  value and price-  to-tangible  book value ratios indicated by the
market prices of the peer group companies. RP Financial applied the peer group's
pricing ratios, as adjusted for certain qualitative valuation factors to account
for differences  between the peer group and us, to our pro forma earnings,  book
value and tangible  book value in order to derive our estimated pro forma market
value.

         RP Financial has estimated  that as of November 26, 2004, the pro forma
market value of Kearny  Financial Corp.  ranged from a minimum of $467.5 million
to a maximum of $632.5 million. Based on this valuation and the $10.00 per share
price,  the  number of shares of common  stock to be issued by Kearny  Financial
Corp. and outstanding  upon completion of the offering will range from a minimum
of 46,750,000 shares to a maximum of 63,250,000  shares.  Kearny Financial Corp.
is offering for sale 30% of these shares,  or between  14,025,000 and 18,975,000
shares. Kearny MHC will own between 32,725,000 and 44,275,000 shares, or 70%, of
Kearny Financial Corp. at the completion of the stock offering.

         Stock  Trading  Multiples of Mutual  Holding  Companies.  The following
table presents the pricing ratios for the peer group of publicly traded mid-tier
thrift holding  company  subsidiaries  of mutual  holding  companies and the pro
forma pricing ratios for Kearny Financial Corp. as calculated by RP Financial in
its appraisal report dated November 26, 2004.



                                           Price-to-earnings      Price-to-book      Price-to-tangible
                                              multiple(1)          value ratio       book value ratio
                                              --------             -----------       ----------------
                                                                                  
Kearny Financial Corp. (pro forma)(2)
    Minimum..............................        32.9x               112.7%               141.2%
    Midpoint.............................        38.8x               126.3%               156.5%
    Maximum..............................        44.8x               138.5%               169.8%
    Maximum, as adjusted.................        51.7x               151.5%               183.8%
Valuation of peer group companies
as of November 26, 2004 (3)
    Average..............................        25.4x               236.3%               261.6%
    Median...............................        25.1x               225.0%               259.7%


-------------
(1)  The price-to-earnings multiples set forth in the above table do not reflect
     the recognition of  compensation  expense in connection with stock options.
     New accounting guidance issued by the Financial  Accounting Standards Board
     in December 2004 requires the recognition of  compensation  expense related
     to stock  options  outstanding  based upon the fair value of such awards at
     the  date of grant  over the  period  that  such  awards  are  earned.  The
     implementation of this accounting  guidance will have a significant  impact
     on  pricing  ratios  of  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and will  likely  have a
     significant  impact  on the peer  group  companies  as well.  The pro forma
     information  presented on pages 24 to 30 reflects an estimated  expense for
     the stock option plan that may be adopted by Kearny Financial Corp. and the
     resulting  effect on the pro forma  price-to-earnings  multiples for Kearny
     Financial Corp.
(2)  Based on Kearny Financial  Corp.'s  financial data as of and for the twelve
     months ended September 30, 2004. 
(3)  Reflects  earnings for the most recent  12-month  period for which data was
     publicly available.

         For a summary of selected  pricing  ratios for the peer group  mid-tier
thrift  holding  companies  on  a   fully-converted   basis  and  the  resulting
fully-converted  pro forma pricing ratios for Kearny Financial Corp., please see
the table on page 132.

         The  independent  appraisal  is  not  necessarily   indicative  of  the
post-stock offering trading value. Do not assume or expect that the valuation of
Kearny Financial Corp. as indicated above means that the common stock will trade
at or above the $10.00 purchase price after the stock offering is completed.

         The amount of common stock being  offered may be increased by up to 15%
without  notice to persons  who have  subscribed  for stock,  so that a total of
21,821,250 shares would be sold in the offering.

                                        6

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We received  authorization  from the Office of Thrift Supervision to conduct the
stock offering on December 28, 2004. The  independent  appraisal must be updated
before we can complete the stock  offering  and such updated  appraisal  will be
subject to the  further  approval  of the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  If the
updated independent  valuation would result in more than 21,821,250 shares being
sold, we would notify persons who have  subscribed for stock and they would have
the opportunity to confirm, change or cancel their subscription orders.

After-Market Performance Information Provided by Independent Appraiser.

         The following table,  prepared by our independent  appraiser,  presents
for all mutual holding  company  reorganizations  with a  "first-step"  minority
stock issuance from January 1, 2002 to November 26, 2004,  the percentage  stock
appreciation from the initial trading date of the offering to the dates shown in
the table.  The table also  presents  the  average and median  percentage  stock
appreciation for the January 1, 2002 to November 26, 2004 time frame and for the
January 1, 2004 to November  26, 2004 time frame.  This  information  relates to
stock appreciation  experienced by other companies that reorganized in different
markets and that may have issued more or less than 30% of their  common stock to
the public.  In addition,  the companies may have no similarities to Kearny with
regard to the  market in which  Kearny  competes,  earnings  quality  and growth
potential, among other factors. The information shown in the following table was
not included in the appraisal  report,  however,  the  appraisal  prepared by RP
Financial did consider the aftermarket  trading  experience of transactions that
closed  within the three months prior to the  November 26, 2004  valuation  date
used in the appraisal.

         This  table is not  intended  to  indicate  how our stock may  perform.
Furthermore,  this table presents only short-term price  performance and may not
be indicative of the longer-term stock price performance of these companies. The
increase in any particular  company's stock price is subject to various factors,
including,  but not  limited to, the amount of  proceeds a company  raises,  the
company's  historical and anticipated  operating results, the nature and quality
of the  company's  assets,  the  company's  market  area,  and  the  quality  of
management and  management's  ability to deploy  proceeds (such as through loans
and  investments,  the  acquisition  of other  financial  institutions  or other
businesses, the payment of dividends and common stock repurchases). In addition,
stock  prices may be affected by general  market and  economic  conditions,  the
interest rate environment,  the market for financial  institutions and merger or
takeover  transactions,  the presence of  professional  and other  investors who
purchase stock on speculation,  as well as other unforeseeable events not in the
control of management.  Before you make an investment  decision,  we urge you to
carefully read this prospectus,  including, but not limited to, the Risk Factors
beginning on page 12.



                                         "First-Step" Mutual Holding Company Offerings with
                                Completed Closing Dates between January 1, 2002 and November 26, 2004
                                                                          Price Performance from Initial Trading Date
                                                                          -------------------------------------------
Transaction                                         Closing Date       1 day      1 week      1 month     November 26, 2004
-----------                                         ------------       -----      ------      -------     -----------------
                                                                                                 
PSB Holdings, Inc. (MHC)                               10/5/04         5.0%        6.0%         5.0%            20.0%
Atlantic Coast Federal Corp. (MHC)                     10/5/04         17.5%      23.1%        30.0%            41.5%
Naugatuck Valley Financial Corp. (MHC)                 10/1/04         8.0%        8.1%         8.0%            10.0%
SI Financial Group, Inc. (MHC)                         10/1/04         12.0%      10.6%        10.3%            21.0%
First Federal Financial Services (MHC)                 6/29/04         15.0%      22.5%        35.0%            47.5%
Monadnock Community (MHC)                              6/29/04         3.8%        0.0%        -3.8%            28.8%
Wawel Savings Bank (MHC)                               4/1/04          29.5%      25.0%        12.5%            15.0%
Osage Federal Financial, Inc. (MHC)                    4/1/04          20.0%      22.5%         9.5%            20.0%
K-Fed Bancorp (MHC)                                    3/31/04         34.9%      29.3%        15.9%            52.5%
Citizens Community Bancorp (MHC)                       3/30/04         23.7%      27.5%        18.0%            50.0%
Clifton Savings Bancorp, Inc. (MHC)                    3/4/04          22.5%      40.9%        32.9%            26.2%


                                        7

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                                         "First-Step" Mutual Holding Company Offerings with
                                Completed Closing Dates between January 1, 2002 and November 26, 2004
                                                                          Price Performance from Initial Trading Date
                                                                          -------------------------------------------
Transaction                                         Closing Date       1 day      1 week      1 month     November 26, 2004
-----------                                         ------------       -----      ------      -------     -----------------
                                                                                                
Cheviot Financial Corp. (MHC)                          1/6/04          33.2%      33.5%        34.2%            15.0%
Flatbush Federal Bancorp, Inc. (MHC)                  10/21/03         63.8%      56.3%        63.8%            46.9%
ASB Holding Company (MHC)                              10/3/03         62.0%      69.0%        67.5%            75.0%
Synergy Financial Group (MHC)                          9/18/02         29.3%      27.0%        27.0%           N/A(1)
Minden Bancorp (MHC)                                   7/2/02          19.5%      19.5%        18.5%            99.0%
New England Bancshares (MHC)                           6/4/02          23.0%      23.5%        23.5%            98.5%
Partners Trust Financial Group (MHC)                   4/4/02          42.5%      48.5%        49.8%           N/A(1)




                                                                          Price Performance from Initial Trading Date
                                                                    -------------------------------------------------
                                                                       1 day      1 week      1 month     November 26, 2004
                                                                       -----      ------      -------     -----------------
                                                                                                    
Offerings with closing dates between
 January 1, 2002 and November 26, 2004:
     Average                                                           25.8%      27.4%        25.4%            41.7%
     Median                                                            22.8%      24.3%        21.0%            35.1%

Offerings with closing dates between
 January 1, 2004 and November 26, 2004:
     Average                                                           18.8%      20.8%        17.3%            29.0%
     Median                                                            18.8%      22.8%        14.2%            23.6%


--------------------
(1)  These companies completed a "second-step"  mutual to stock conversion prior
     to November 26, 2004 and no longer exist as mutual holding companies, so no
     stock appreciation information is available for that date.

         Data  presented in the table  reflects a small number of  transactions.
While stock prices of reorganizing institutions have, on average,  increased for
the limited  period  presented,  there can be no assurance  that our stock price
will appreciate the same amount,  if at all. There can also be no assurance that
our stock price will not trade below $10.00 per share. The substantial  proceeds
raised as a  percentage  of pro forma  stockholders'  equity may have a negative
effect on our stock price  performance.  See Risk Factors - After this offering,
our  return  on equity  will be low  compared  to other  companies.  This  could
negatively  impact the price of our stock. In addition,  the  transactions  from
which the data are derived  occurred  primarily  during a falling  interest rate
environment,  during which the market for financial institution stocks typically
increases.  If interest rates rise, our net interest income and the value of our
assets likely would be reduced,  negatively  affecting our stock price. See Risk
Factors - An  increase in interest  rates is  expected to  adversely  affect our
earnings.

Stock Benefit Plans for Management.

         In order to align our employees' and directors' interests closer to our
stockholders'  interests,  we intend to establish certain benefit plans that use
our stock as  compensation.  We intend to establish an employee stock  ownership
plan for the  exclusive  benefit of  participating  employees of Kearny  Federal
Savings Bank. We also intend to adopt a stock option plan and a restricted stock
plan for the benefit of directors and officers  following  the  offering.  In no
event  will these  plans be adopted  sooner  than six months  subsequent  to the
completion  of the  offering.  Under the  current  regulations  of the Office of
Thrift Supervision, the stock option and restricted stock plans must be approved
by a majority of the total votes eligible to be cast by our stockholders,  other
than Kearny MHC, unless we obtain a waiver from the Office of Thrift Supervision
allowing  approval by a majority of votes  cast,  other than by Kearny MHC.  The
plans and the approval of the plans will comply with all of the then  applicable
Office of Thrift Supervision  regulations.  Officers,  directors,  and employees
will not be required to pay cash for shares received under

                                        8

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the employee stock ownership plan or shares received under the restricted  stock
plan, but will be required to pay the exercise price to exercise stock options.

         The following table presents information  regarding the participants in
each plan,  the  percentage  of total  outstanding  shares  after the  offering,
including  and  excluding the shares held by Kearny MHC, and the dollar value of
the stock for our employee stock ownership plan and stock-based incentive plans.
It is  assumed  that the value of the stock in the  table is $10.00  per  share.
Stock options will be granted with a per share  exercise price at least equal to
the  market  price of our  common  stock on the date of grant.  The value to the
recipient will be equal to the difference  between the fair market value and the
exercise  price.  Accordingly,  the value of a stock  option  will  depend  upon
changes, if any, in the price of our common stock during the period in which the
stock option may be exercised.  The table below assumes that 55,000,000  shares,
the midpoint of the offering range, are outstanding, including 16,500,000 shares
held by public  stockholders  and  38,500,000  shares  held by  Kearny  MHC upon
completion of the stock offering.



                                                                                              Percentage of       Percentage
                                                                                               Total Shares       of Shares
                                                        Estimated             Number             Issued,           Sold to
                                      Individuals        Value of           of Shares/          Including           Public
                                       Eligible       Shares/Options        Options at            Shares         Stockholders
                                      to Receive      at Midpoint of       Midpoint of           Held by            in the
                                        Awards        Offering Range      Offering Range        Kearny MHC         Offering
                                        ------        --------------      --------------        ----------         --------
                                                                                                    
Employee stock ownership plan...... Officers            $13,200,000           1,320,000            2.4%              8.0%
                                    and
                                    Employees
Restricted stock plan awards....... Officers             10,780,000           1,078,000            1.96%             6.53%
                                    and
                                    Directors
Stock options...................... Officers             10,672,200(1)        2,695,000            4.9%             16.3%
                                    and
                                    Directors

--------------
(1)  Assumes  that each option has a value of $3.96.  This  estimated  value was
     determined using the Black-Scholes-Merton  option pricing formula using the
     following  assumptions:  (i) the trading  price on date of grant was $10.00
     per share; (ii) exercise price is equal to the trading price on the date of
     grant;  (iii)  dividend  yield of 0%; (iv) expected  life of 10 years;  (v)
     expected  volatility  of  16.57%;  and  risk-free  interest  rate of 4.27%.
     Because there is currently no market for Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  common
     stock,  the assumed  expected  volatility is based on the SNL Financial MHC
     index. If the fair market value per share on the date of grant is different
     than $10.00,  or if the assumptions  used in the option pricing formula are
     different  from those used in preparing  this pro forma data,  the value of
     the options and the related expense recognized will be different. There can
     be no assurance  that the actual fair market value per share on the date of
     grant,  and  correspondingly  the exercise  price of the  options,  will be
     $10.00 per share.

         See  Management  - Potential  Stock  Benefit  Plans on page 113 and Pro
Forma Data on pages 24 to 30 for more information about the stock benefit plans.

Proposed Stock Purchases by Management.

         While no formal decisions have been made,  preliminary  indications are
that our  directors and executive  officers and their  associates  will purchase
approximately  573,000 shares of common stock in the offering,  which represents
1.2%, 1.0 and 0.9% of the total shares to be  outstanding  after the offering at
the minimum, midpoint and maximum of the offering range, respectively, including
shares  issued to Kearny  MHC,  and 4.1%,  3.5% and 3.0% of the total  number of
shares to be sold to public stockholders at the minimum, midpoint and maximum of
the offering range, respectively.

                                        9

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Our Policy Regarding Dividends.

         We intend to pay  dividends  but have not yet  established a definitive
dividend policy or determined the amount or timing of cash dividends that Kearny
Financial Corp. may pay after the offering.  The timing, amount and frequency of
dividends  will  be  determined  by the  Board  of  Directors.  There  are  also
restrictions on our ability to pay dividends. See Our Policy Regarding Dividends
on page 22.

         If we pay dividends to  stockholders of Kearny  Financial  Corp., it is
anticipated  that any  dividends  payable to Kearny  MHC would be waived.  Under
Office of Thrift  Supervision  regulations,  these  dividend  waivers  would not
result in dilution to public  stockholders in the event that Kearny MHC converts
to stock form in the future.  See  Regulation - Regulation  of Kearny  Financial
Corp. on page 100.

Market for Kearny Financial Corp.'s Common Stock.

         We have  received  approval to have our common stock listed for trading
on the Nasdaq National Market under the symbol "KRNY." Sandler O'Neill currently
intends  to  become  a  market  maker in the  common  stock,  but it is under no
obligation  to do so. We cannot  assure you that  other  market  makers  will be
obtained  or that an active and liquid  trading  market for the shares of common
stock will  develop or if  developed,  will be  maintained.  After shares of the
common  stock  begin  trading,  you may  contact  a stock  broker to buy or sell
shares.

Restrictions  on the  Acquisition of Kearny  Financial  Corp. and Kearny Federal
Savings Bank.

         Federal regulations, as well as provisions contained in the charter and
bylaws of Kearny  Financial Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings Bank,  restrict the
ability of any person,  firm or entity to acquire Kearny Financial Corp., Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank, or their capital stock.  These  restrictions  include the
requirement that a potential  acquirer of common stock obtain the prior approval
of the Office of Thrift  Supervision  before  acquiring  in excess of 10% of the
voting stock of Kearny Financial Corp. or Kearny Federal Savings Bank. Because a
majority of the shares of  outstanding  common stock of Kearny  Financial  Corp.
must be owned by Kearny MHC, any  acquisition of Kearny  Financial Corp. must be
approved  by Kearny  MHC,  and  Kearny  MHC would not be  required  to pursue or
approve a sale of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  even if such sale were  favored by a
majority of Kearny Financial Corp.'s public stockholders.  Additionally,  Office
of  Thrift  Supervision   regulations  prohibit  anyone  from  acquiring  Kearny
Financial Corp. for a period of three years following the offering,  unless such
prohibition is waived by the Office of Thrift Supervision.

Tax Effects of the Offering.

         The  minority  stock  offering  will not be a taxable  transaction  for
purposes  of federal or state  income  taxes for Kearny  MHC,  Kearny  Financial
Corp., Kearny Federal Savings Bank or persons eligible to subscribe for stock in
the offering. See Material Federal and State Tax Consequences of the Offering on
page 136.

Possible Conversion of Kearny MHC to Stock Form.

         In the future,  Kearny MHC may convert from the mutual holding  company
form of organization, wherein a majority of the outstanding stock is held by the
mutual holding company,  to a corporation with 100% of its shares held by public
stockholders.  This  type of  conversion  transaction  is  commonly  known  as a
"second-step  conversion."  In a second-step  conversion,  members of Kearny MHC
would have  subscription  rights to purchase  common stock of the successor full
stock corporation and the public stockholders of Kearny Financial Corp. would be
entitled to exchange  their  shares of common stock for an equal  percentage  of
shares of the successor full stock corporation. Kearny Financial Corp.'s public

                                       10

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stockholders,  therefore,  would own  approximately  the same  percentage of the
successor resulting entity as they owned before the second-step conversion. This
percentage  may be adjusted to reflect any assets owned by Kearny MHC. The Board
of  Directors  has no  current  plans  to  undertake  a  second-step  conversion
transaction.

Risk Factors.

         This  investment  entails  various risks including the possible loss of
principal. You may not be able to sell the stock at or above the $10.00 offering
price. You should carefully read the information under Risk Factors beginning on
page 12.

        For  assistance,  please contact the stock  information  center at (866)
424-2161.  The stock information center's hours of operation are generally 10:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m.,  Eastern time,  Monday through Friday.  The stock information
center is closed on weekends and holidays.

                                       11

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                                  RISK FACTORS

         In  addition  to the other  information  in this  document,  you should
consider carefully the following risk factors in evaluating an investment in our
common stock.

An increase in interest rates is expected to adversely affect our earnings.

         Our earnings largely depend on our net interest income,  which could be
negatively  affected by changes in interest  rates.  Net interest  income is the
difference between:

o    the  interest  income  we  earn  on our  interest-earning  assets,  such as
     mortgage loans and investment securities; and

o    the interest expense we pay on our  interest-bearing  liabilities,  such as
     deposits and amounts we borrow.

         The rates we earn on our assets are  generally  fixed for a contractual
period of time.  We,  like many  savings  institutions,  have  liabilities  that
generally have shorter contractual  maturities than our assets or no contractual
maturities, such as savings and money market deposits. This imbalance can create
significant earnings volatility, because market interest rates change over time.
In addition,  short-term and long-term  interest rates do not necessarily change
at the same time or at the same rate.

         In a period of rising interest rates, the interest income earned on our
assets may not increase as rapidly as the interest paid on our  liabilities.  We
are  vulnerable  to  volatility  in our  earnings  as a result of an increase in
interest  rates  because  the  majority  of  our  interest-earning   assets  are
long-term,  fixed rate assets.  At September  30, 2004,  84.9% of our loans with
contractual maturities of greater than one year had fixed rates of interest, and
79.1% of our total loans had  contractual  maturities  of ten or more years.  At
September  30,  2004,  we held  $724.9  million of  mortgage-backed  securities,
representing  38.1% of our assets. We invest generally in fixed-rate  securities
and  substantially all of our  mortgage-backed  securities at September 30, 2004
had  contractual  maturities  of  ten  or  more  years.  In an  increasing  rate
environment,  our cost of funds is expected to increase  more  rapidly  than the
yields earned on our loan portfolio and securities portfolio because our primary
source  of  funds  is  deposits  with  generally  shorter  maturities  than  the
maturities on our loans and investment  securities.  This is expected to cause a
narrowing of our net interest rate spread and is expected to cause a decrease in
our earnings.

         In a period  of  falling  interest  rates,  prepayments  of  loans  and
mortgage-backed  securities generally will increase as borrowers refinance their
debt in order to reduce their  borrowing cost.  This causes  reinvestment  risk,
because in a falling  rate  environment  we are  generally  not able to reinvest
prepayments  at rates that are  comparable to the rates we earned on the prepaid
loans or securities.  A falling rate  environment  would result in a decrease in
rates we pay on deposits  and  borrowings,  but the  decrease in the cost of our
funds may not be as great as the  decrease in the yields on our  mortgage-backed
securities and loan portfolios. This could cause a narrowing of our net interest
rate spread and could cause a decrease in our earnings.

         We are further  exposed to interest  rate risk due to the large portion
of our total deposits that are  certificates of deposit.  At September 30, 2004,
$869.2 million,  or 57.5%,  of our total deposits were  certificates of deposit,
and of that amount $181.7 million were "jumbo" certificates of $100,000 or more.
Deposit inflows are significantly influenced by general interest rates and money
market conditions. The inflow of jumbo certificates of deposit and the retention
of such deposits upon maturity are  particularly  sensitive to general  interest
rates  and  money  market  conditions,  making  jumbo  certificates  of  deposit
traditionally a more volatile source of funding than core deposits.  In order to
retain  jumbo  certificates  of  deposit,  we may  have to pay a  premium  rate,
resulting in an increase in our cost of funds. In a rising rate

                                       12



environment,  we may be unwilling or unable to pay a  competitive  rate.  To the
extent  that such  deposits  do not remain with us, they may need to be replaced
with borrowings which could increase our cost of funds and negatively impact our
interest rate spread.

         Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank  monitors its interest  rate  sensitivity
through  the use of an  asset/liability  management  model which  estimates  the
change in its net  portfolio  value  (defined  as the  current  market  value of
assets, less the current market value of liabilities,  plus or minus the current
value of off-balance  sheet items) in the event of a range of assumed changes in
market  interest rates.  Our net portfolio value analysis,  as calculated by the
Office of Thrift  Supervision using information as of September 30, 2004, showed
that in an immediate and  permanent  2.0%  increase in interest  rates,  our net
portfolio  value  would be  expected to  decrease  by 30%.  This  analysis  also
indicated that as of September 30, 2004 an immediate and permanent 2.0% increase
in interest rates would cause an approximately  14% decrease in our net interest
income.  See  Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of Financial  Condition and
Results of Operations - Management of Interest Rate Risk and Market Risk on page
56.

We may not be able to successfully implement our plans for growth or continue to
experience  the same rate of growth that we have had in the past, and we may not
be able to successfully manage our future growth.

         Over the past several years, we have experienced  rapid and significant
growth.  Between  March  1999 and July  2003,  we  completed  three  whole  bank
acquisitions  and the  assumption  of deposits of a branch of another  financial
institution.  These transactions added a total of $936.0 million in assets, more
than doubling our total assets,  which grew from $793.2 million at June 30, 1998
to $1.90 billion at September 30, 2004. In addition to building our core banking
business  through  internal growth and de novo branching in the future,  we will
also  actively  consider  expansion  opportunities  such as the  acquisition  of
branches and other financial institutions.  There can be no assurance,  however,
that we will continue to experience  such rapid  growth,  or any growth,  in the
future.  We may have difficulty  finding suitable sites for de novo branches and
identifying and successfully acquiring branches or other financial institutions.

         Furthermore,  there are many  challenges  associated  with  integrating
merged institutions and it requires time to adjust to expanded operations, so we
cannot assure you that we will be able to adequately and  profitably  manage our
possible  future growth.  In order to effectively  manage any future growth,  as
well as to comply with the additional requirements that we will be subject to as
a publicly-traded company following the offering, we may need to make changes to
our  administrative  and  operational  infrastructure,  including  adopting  new
policies and procedures and improving our financial and management  controls and
processes  and  reporting  systems.  As a result,  we may need to add more staff
and/or reassign or increase the  responsibilities  of our existing  officers and
key  employees.  We  cannot  assure  you that we will be able to take the  steps
necessary to effectively  manage our possible  future growth or that we will not
have to incur additional expenditures beyond current projections to support such
growth.

A portion of our total loan portfolio  consists of  multi-family  and commercial
real estate loans and commercial  business loans,  and we intend to continue our
origination  of such loans after the offering at the same level,  if not higher.
The  repayment  risk related to these types of loans is considered to be greater
than the risk related to one- to four-family residential loans.

         At September 30, 2004,  our loan  portfolio  included  $86.8 million of
multi-family and commercial real estate loans and commercial  business loans, or
16.7% of our total loan portfolio.  It is our intention to continue to originate
these types of loans at the same percentage level, if not higher.

         Unlike one- to four-family  residential mortgage loans, which generally
are made on the basis of the  borrower's  ability to make  repayment from his or
her  employment  and other  income and which are secured by real  property  with
values that tend to be more easily ascertainable,  the repayment of multi-family
and

                                       13



commercial  real  estate  loans  and  commercial  business  loans  typically  is
dependent  on the  successful  operations  and income  stream of the  borrowers'
business  and the real  estate  securing  the loan as  collateral,  which can be
significantly  affected  by  economic  conditions.   In  addition,  these  loans
generally  carry  larger  balances  to single  borrowers  or  related  groups of
borrowers  than one- to four-family  loans.  Any late payments or the failure to
repay such loans would hurt our earnings. See Business of Kearny Federal Savings
Bank - Lending  Activities - Multi-family  and Commercial  Real Estate  Mortgage
Loans on page 69.

Strong   competition   within  our   market   area  may  limit  our  growth  and
profitability.

Competition  in the banking  and  financial  services  industry in New Jersey is
intense.  In  our  market  area,  we  compete  with  commercial  banks,  savings
institutions, mortgage brokerage firms, credit unions, finance companies, mutual
funds,  insurance companies and brokerage and investment banking firms operating
locally and elsewhere.  Many of these  competitors  have  substantially  greater
resources  and lending  limits than we do and offer  services  that we do not or
cannot provide.  This  competition has made it more difficult for us to make new
loans and more difficult to retain deposits.  Price  competition for loans might
result in us originating  fewer loans,  or earning less on our loans,  and price
competition  for  deposits  might  result in us reducing  our total  deposits or
paying more on our deposits.  There are large competitors  operating  throughout
our total market area,  including Bank of America,  Commerce Bank, Wachovia Bank
and PNC Bank,  and we also face strong  competition  from other  community-based
financial institutions.  Our deposit market share in New Jersey was only 0.7% at
June 30, 2004, a reduction from 0.8% at June 30, 2003,  and the largest  deposit
share  in any  county  in which we have  branches  was 2.5% at June 30,  2004 in
Bergen County, down from 2.8% at June 30, 2003.

Our  business  is  geographically  concentrated  in New Jersey and a downturn in
conditions in the state could have an adverse impact on our profitability.

         A substantial  majority of our loans are to individuals  and businesses
in New  Jersey.  Any  decline in the  economy of the state could have an adverse
impact on our  earnings.  Because we have a  significant  amount of real  estate
loans, decreases in local real estate values could adversely affect the value of
property  used as  collateral.  Adverse  changes in the  economy may also have a
negative  effect on the ability of our  borrowers to make timely  repayments  of
their loans, which would have an adverse impact on our earnings.

We have recently  opened a new  administrative  building and intend to construct
new buildings for certain new and existing branch locations. We will continue to
actively consider  opportunities  for de novo branching.  Costs related to these
buildings and expansion plans will negatively impact earnings in future periods.

         Our  non-interest  expense  for the year  ended  June 30,  2004 and the
quarter ended  September 30, 2004, does not reflect the impact of our new 53,000
square feet  administrative  building in Fairfield,  New Jersey. We began moving
management  staff and  administrative  operations into parts of this building in
October 2004 and completed the move-in phase in December 2004. The total cost of
this building is expected to be approximately $13.5 million,  which cost will be
capitalized  and  amortized  over  a  forty-year  period.  Additionally,  it  is
estimated  that the annual  operating  expense of this new  building,  excluding
depreciation, will be approximately $450,000. We expect to open a de novo branch
office in Lacey,  New Jersey in the first quarter of 2005,  with a total cost of
approximately  $2.3  million.  During 2005, we also plan to replace three office
locations with new buildings, at an estimated cost of approximately $1.9 million
per branch.  Furthermore,  in December of 2004, we acquired a 3.7 acre parcel of
land in West Caldwell,  New Jersey for approximately $2.3 million.  We intend to
construct a branch  office at this  location  and  subdivide  and lease to third
parties  the portion of land not used for the branch  building.  Costs for these
branch  constructions  will be  capitalized  and the related  amortization  will
impact  earnings  going  forward.  Additional  expenses  related to the  planned
expansion of our  operations  through de novo  branching or the  acquisition  of
branches or other financial institutions could also adversely impact earnings in
future periods.

                                       14



After  this  offering,  our  return  on  equity  will be low  compared  to other
companies. This could negatively impact the price of our stock.

         The net proceeds  from the  offering  will  substantially  increase our
equity capital.  It will take a significant  period of time to prudently  invest
this capital. For the quarter ended September 30, 2004, our annualized return on
average equity was 5.16%. On a pro forma basis assuming that  18,975,000  shares
had been sold at the beginning of the year, our  annualized  return on pro forma
equity for the quarter ended September 30, 2004 would be approximately 2.78%. As
a result,  our return on equity,  which is the ratio of our earnings  divided by
our average equity capital,  will be lower than that of many similar  companies.
To the extent that the stock market values a company based in part on its return
on equity,  our low return on equity relative to our peer group could negatively
affect the trading price of our stock.

         At September 30, 2004, our securities  portfolio was 63.6% and our loan
portfolio was 27.1% of our total assets.  Because  securities  generally yield a
lower rate than loans, our asset  composition is likely to cause our earnings to
be lower than financial  institutions that have a higher proportionate amount of
their   assets  in  loans.   Although  we  are  seeking  to  increase  our  loan
originations,  it will take a significant  period of time to change our relative
balances of loans versus securities.

Additional  public  company and annual stock employee  compensation  and benefit
expenses  following the offering may reduce our  profitability and stockholders'
equity.

         Following the offering,  our non-interest expense is likely to increase
as a result of the  financial  accounting,  legal and various  other  additional
expenses  usually  associated with operating as a public  company.  We also will
recognize additional annual employee  compensation and benefit expenses stemming
from the shares granted to employees,  officers and directors  under new benefit
plans.  These additional  expenses will adversely affect our  profitability  and
stockholders'   equity.   We  cannot  predict  the  actual  amount  of  the  new
stock-related  compensation and benefit expenses because  applicable  accounting
standards  require  that they be based on the fair market value of the shares of
common  stock at specific  points in the future;  however,  we expect them to be
material.  We will recognize  expense for our employee stock ownership plan when
shares  are  committed  to be  released  to  participants'  accounts  and  would
recognize expenses for restricted stock awards over the vesting period of awards
made to recipients.  In addition,  the Financial  Accounting Standards Board has
announced  a change  in the  required  accounting  methods  applicable  to stock
options  effective after June 15, 2005. Under such accounting  requirements,  we
will be required to  recognize  compensation  expense  related to stock  options
outstanding  based upon the fair value of such  awards at the date of grant over
the  period  that such  awards  are  earned.  These  expenses  in the first year
following the offering have been estimated to be  approximately  $4.5 million at
the maximum of the offering as set forth in the pro forma financial  information
under Pro Forma Data on pages 24 to 30  assuming  the $10.00 per share  purchase
price as fair market value.  Actual expenses,  however,  may be higher or lower,
depending  on the price of our common  stock.  For further  discussion  of these
plans, see Management - Potential Stock Benefit Plans on page 113.

The  implementation  of  stock-based  benefit  plans may dilute  your  ownership
interest in Kearny Financial Corp.

         We intend to adopt a stock  option  plan and a  restricted  stock  plan
following the stock  offering.  These stock benefit plans will be funded through
either open market  purchases  or from the issuance of  authorized  but unissued
shares.  Stockholders  would experience a reduction in ownership interest in the
event newly issued  shares are used to fund stock  options and awards made under
the  restricted  stock plan. The use of newly issued shares of stock to fund the
restricted  stock plan instead of open market  purchases would dilute the voting
interests of existing  stockholders  by  approximately  1.92%.  The use of newly
issued  shares of stock to fund  exercises  of options  granted  under the stock
option plan instead of open market purchases

                                       15



would dilute the voting  interests  of existing  stockholders  by  approximately
4.67%. See Management - Potential Stock Benefit Plans on page 113.

Persons  who  purchase  stock in the  offering  will own a  minority  of  Kearny
Financial  Corp.'s common stock and will not be able to exercise  voting control
over  most  matters  put to a  vote  of  stockholders,  including  any  proposal
regarding the acquisition of Kearny Financial Corp.

         Kearny MHC will own a majority of Kearny Financial Corp.'s common stock
after the  offering.  The Board of  Directors of Kearny MHC is also the Board of
Directors of Kearny  Financial Corp. and will be able to exercise voting control
over most matters put to a vote of  stockholders.  For  example,  Kearny MHC may
exercise  its voting  control to prevent a sale or merger  transaction  in which
stockholders  could receive a premium for their shares, to elect directors or to
approve employee benefit plans.

Provisions in our charter and bylaws limit the rights of stockholders, may deter
potential takeovers and may reduce the trading price of our stock.

         Provisions  in our  charter  and  bylaws  may  make  it  difficult  and
expensive  to pursue a change in control or takeover  attempt  that our Board of
Directors  opposes.  As a result, you may not have an opportunity to participate
in such a  transaction,  and the trading  price of our stock may not rise to the
level of other institutions that are more vulnerable to hostile takeovers.  Such
provisions include:

          o    the election of directors to staggered three-year terms;
          o    provisions   restricting  the  calling  of  special  meetings  of
               stockholders;
          o    the absence of cumulative  voting by stockholders in elections of
               directors; and
          o    advance notice  requirements for stockholder  nominations and new
               business.

See  Restrictions on Acquisition of Kearny  Financial Corp. - Charter and Bylaws
of Kearny Financial Corp. on page 138.

Office  of  Thrift  Supervision  policy on  remutualization  transactions  could
prohibit  acquisition of Kearny Financial Corp.,  which may adversely affect our
stock price.

         Current  Office  of  Thrift  Supervision  regulations  permit  a mutual
holding  company to be acquired  by a mutual  institution  in a  remutualization
transaction.  The possibility of a remutualization transaction has resulted in a
degree of takeover speculation for mutual holding companies that is reflected in
the per share price of mutual holding  companies'  common stocks.  However,  the
Office of Thrift  Supervision has issued a policy  statement  indicating that it
views  remutualization  transactions as raising  significant  issues  concerning
disparate  treatment of minority  stockholders  and mutual members of the target
entity and raising  issues  concerning  the effect on the mutual  members of the
acquiring entity. Under certain circumstances,  the Office of Thrift Supervision
intends to give these issues special scrutiny and reject applications  providing
for the  remutualization  of a mutual  holding  company unless the applicant can
clearly  demonstrate  that the Office of Thrift  Supervision's  concerns are not
warranted  in the  particular  case.  Should  the  Office of Thrift  Supervision
prohibit or otherwise restrict these transactions in the future, our stock price
may be adversely affected.

We have broad discretion in allocating the proceeds of the offering. Our failure
to effectively utilize such proceeds would reduce our profitability.

         We intend to  contribute  approximately  50% of the net proceeds of the
offering to Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank. We may use the remaining net proceeds
to  repurchase  common  stock,  purchase  investment  securities,   finance  the
acquisition of other financial institutions or other businesses that are related
to banking or for other general corporate  purposes.  We expect to use a portion
of the net proceeds to fund the purchase

                                       16



by Kearny Federal  Savings Bank's employee stock ownership plan of shares in the
offering.  Kearny Federal  Savings Bank may use the proceeds it receives to fund
new loans,  purchase investment  securities,  establish or acquire new branches,
acquire  financial  institutions or other businesses that are related to banking
or for general  corporate  purposes.  We have not allocated  specific amounts of
proceeds for any of these purposes, and we will have significant  flexibility in
determining  how much of the net  proceeds  we apply to  different  uses and the
timing of such  applications.  Our failure to utilize  these  funds  effectively
would reduce our profitability.

Our stock price may decline when trading commences.

         We cannot  guarantee  that if you purchase  shares in the offering that
you will be able to sell them at or above the $10.00 purchase  price.  After the
shares of our common stock begin trading,  the trading price of the common stock
will be determined by the  marketplace,  and will be influenced  not only by our
results  but by  many  factors  outside  of our  control,  including  prevailing
interest rates,  investor  perceptions and general  industry,  geopolitical  and
economic  conditions.  Publicly  traded  stocks,  including  stocks of financial
institutions,  have recently  experienced  substantial  market price volatility.
These market  fluctuations might not be related to the operating  performance of
particular companies whose shares are traded.

                                       17



                   A WARNING ABOUT FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

         This  prospectus  contains  forward-looking  statements,  which  can be
identified  by the use of words such as  "believes,"  "expects,"  "anticipates,"
"estimates" or similar expressions. Forward-looking statements include:

o    statements of our goals, intentions and expectations;

o    statements  regarding our business plans,  prospects,  growth and operating
     strategies;

o    statements regarding the quality of our loan and investment portfolios; and

o    estimates of our risks and future costs and benefits.

         These  forward-looking  statements are subject to significant risks and
uncertainties.  Actual results may differ materially from those  contemplated by
the forward-looking statements due to, among others, the following factors:

o    general economic conditions,  either nationally or in our market area, that
     are worse than expected;

o    changes in the interest rate  environment  that reduce our interest margins
     or reduce the fair value of financial instruments;

o    increased competitive pressures among financial services companies;

o    changes in consumer spending, borrowing and savings habits;

o    legislative or regulatory changes that adversely affect our business;

o    adverse changes in the securities markets;

o    our ability to successfully manage our growth;

o    changes in accounting policies and practices, as may be adopted by the bank
     regulatory agencies, the Financial Accounting Standards Board or the Public
     Company Accounting Oversight Board; and

o    our  ability to enter into new  markets  and/or  expand  product  offerings
     successfully and take advantage of growth opportunities.

         Any of the  forward-looking  statements that we make in this prospectus
and in other  public  statements  we make may  turn out to be wrong  because  of
inaccurate  assumptions we might make, because of the factors  illustrated above
or  because  of  other  factors  that  we  cannot  foresee.   Consequently,   no
forward-looking statement can be guaranteed.

                                       18



                        SELECTED FINANCIAL AND OTHER DATA

         The following financial  information and other data in this section for
the years ended June 30, 2004,  2003 and 2002 is derived  from Kearny  Financial
Corp.'s audited  consolidated  financial  statements and should be read together
with the consolidated  financial  statements and the notes thereto  beginning on
page F-1 of this document.  The  information at and for the years ended June 30,
2001 and 2000 is derived from  unaudited  consolidated  financial  statements of
Kearny  Financial  Corp.  The  information  at and for the  three  months  ended
September 30, 2004 and 2003 is unaudited. However, in the opinion of management,
all adjustments,  consisting solely of normal recurring  adjustments,  necessary
for a fair  presentation of the results of operations for the unaudited  periods
have been made. The selected operating data presented below for the three months
ended September 30, 2004 are not necessarily  indicative of the results that may
be  expected  for the full  year or any other  period.  Kearny  Financial  Corp.
acquired Pulaski Bancorp,  Inc. in October 2002 and West Essex Bancorp,  Inc. in
July 2003. For an explanation of the accounting  treatment of the  acquisitions,
see Note 2 to the consolidated  financial  statements and Recent Acquisitions on
page 34.



                                                                                          
                                                        At                                         At June 30,       
Balance Sheet Data:                                 September 30,      -------------------------------------------------------------
                                                2004             2004          2003           2002             2001         2000
                                             ----------       ----------    ----------      ----------      ----------    ----------

                                                                                  (In thousands)
                                                                                                             
Assets....................................   $1,904,209       $1,936,518    $1,996,482      $1,905,638      $1,756,257    $1,680,846
Loans receivable, net.....................      515,196          505,794       509,161         591,142         602,182       591,950
Mortgage-backed securities
  held to maturity........................      724,876          771,353       681,619         968,516         689,204       484,971
Securities available for sale.............       41,335           41,564        37,840          39,679          42,367        36,166
Investment securities held to maturity....      445,769          435,870       287,321         139,446         193,955       470,219
Cash and cash equivalents.................       36,863           39,488       325,657          97,030         159,901        22,655
Goodwill..................................       82,263           82,263        31,746          15,600          17,911        20,222
Deposits..................................    1,510,810        1,537,510     1,613,684       1,479,729       1,342,107     1,260,846
Federal Home Loan Bank advances...........       84,100           94,234        75,749         112,080         112,109       138,051
Total stockholders' equity................      297,802          293,505       295,669         302,454         290,110       272,808




                                              For the Three Months      
                                               Ended September 30,                        For the Year Ended June 30,           
                                        ------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------
                                             2004           2003        2004        2003      2002          2001        2000
                                           -------        -------    ----------  ----------   ---------    ---------  ---------
                                                                                       (In thousands)
                                                                                                     
Summary of Operations:
Interest income.........................   $19,907        $19,656     $  78,654   $  96,492   $ 106,162    $ 114,566  $ 110,890
Interest expense........................     7,103          9,158        32,100      44,695      54,443       67,318     60,818
                                           -------        -------     ---------   ---------   ---------    ---------  ---------
Net interest income.....................    12,804         10,498        46,554      51,797      51,719       47,248     50,072
Provision for loan losses...............       151              -             -           -           3          162        102
                                           -------        -------     ---------   ---------   ---------    ---------  ---------
Net interest income after provision
  for loan losses.......................    12,653         10,498        46,554      51,797      51,716       47,086     49,970
Non-interest income.....................       494            438         1,560       1,847       1,765        1,523      2,045
Merger related expenses.................         -            592           592      14,921         619            -          -
Non-interest expense, excluding
  merger related expenses...............     7,789          7,151        28,880      29,431      28,446       27,519     25,879
                                           -------        -------     ---------   ---------   ---------    ---------  ---------
Income before income taxes..............     5,358          3,193        18,642       9,292      24,416       21,090     26,136
Provisions for income taxes.............     1,562            958         5,745       5,237       7,926        6,823      8,815
                                           -------        -------     ---------   ---------   ---------    ---------  ---------
Net income..............................   $ 3,796        $ 2,235     $  12,897   $   4,055   $  16,490    $  14,267  $  17,321
                                           =======        =======     =========   =========   =========    =========  =========
Per Share Data:
Net income per share - basic............   $379.60        $223.50     $1,289.70   $  337.52   $1,294.02    $1,119.43  $1,356.54
Net income per share - diluted..........   $379.60        $223.50     $1,289.70   $  336.06   $1,287.13    $1,116.48  $1,356.37
Weighted average number of common
    shares outstanding - basic..........    10,000         10,000        10,000      12,014      12,743       12,745     12,769
Weighted average number of common
    shares outstanding - diluted........    10,000         10,000        10,000      12,066      12,811       12,779     12,770


                                       19




                                            For the Three Months
                                            Ended September 30,             At or For the Year Ended June 30,
                                         -------------------------   ---------------------------------------------------
                                                  2004    2003        2004      2003       2002       2001       2000
                                                 ------  ------      ------    ------     ------     ------     -----
                                                                                            
Per Share Data:
  Cash dividends per share (1) ........      $    --    $    --    $    --    $ 82.07   $  98.80    $ 79.56    $ 64.77

  Dividend payout ratio (2) ...........         0.00%      0.00%      0.00%     24.32%      7.63%      7.11%      4.77%

Performance Ratios:
  Return on average assets
    (net income divided by
    average total  assets) ............         0.79%      0.46%      0.67%      0.21%      0.91%      0.83%      1.03%

  Return on average equity
    (net income divided by
    average equity) ...................         5.16       3.19       4.52       1.38       5.55       4.96       6.45

  Net interest rate spread ............         2.65       2.06       2.37       2.36       2.35       2.08       2.45

  Net interest margin on average
    interest-earnings assets ..........         2.87       2.30       2.59       2.75       2.95       2.86       3.11

  Average interest-earning
    assets to average
    interest-bearing liabilities ......       114.31     112.13     112.46     116.54     119.58     119.17     117.56

  Efficiency ratio (Non-interest
    expense divided by the sum
    of net interest income and
    non-interest income) ..............        58.57      70.80      61.25      82.68      54.34      56.42      49.66

  Non-interest expense to .............         1.62       1.58       1.52       2.26       1.60       1.60       1.54
    average assets

Asset Quality Ratios:(3)
  Non-performing loans to total loans .         0.48       0.53       0.46       0.57       0.55       0.53       0.55

  Non-performing assets to total assets         0.14       0.14       0.13       0.16       0.18       0.20       0.27

  Net charge-offs to average
   loans outstanding ..................         0.00       0.00       0.01       0.00       0.00       0.01       0.06

  Allowance for loan losses to
       total loans ....................         1.02       1.05       1.01       1.01       0.87       0.85       0.86

  Allowance for loan losses to
       non-performing loans ...........       213.65     198.62     220.96     177.64     157.24     160.52     155.56

Capital Ratios:
  Average equity to average
    assets (average equity divided
    by average total assets) ..........        15.30      14.25      14.73      14.97      16.38      16.70      15.99

  Equity to assets at period end ......        15.64      14.47      15.16      14.81      15.87      16.52      16.23

  Tangible equity to tangible
       assets at period end ...........        11.73      10.56      11.29      13.31      15.02      15.46      14.97

Number of Offices:
Offices (including offices
       acquired in mergers) ...........        25         25         25         25         24         23         23

----------------                                                           
(1)  Cash dividends paid per share represents the aggregate of dividends paid by
     Kearny Financial Corp., West Essex Bancorp, Inc., and Pulaski Bancorp, Inc.
     to the  minority  stockholders  of West Essex  Bancorp,  Inc.  and  Pulaski
     Bancorp,  Inc. divided by the outstanding  shares of Kearny Financial Corp.
     common stock.
(2)  Represents  cash  dividends  declared  per share  divided by net income per
     common share.
(3)  Asset quality ratios are period end ratios.

                                       20



                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

         We are conducting  this stock offering  principally to raise capital to
support our  anticipated  future  growth.  The net  proceeds  will depend on the
expenses  incurred by us in connection with the offering and the total number of
shares of stock  issued in the  offering,  which will depend on the  independent
valuation and market  considerations.  Although the actual net proceeds from the
sale of the common stock cannot be  determined  until the offering is completed,
we  estimate  that net  proceeds  from the sale of common  stock will be between
$137.7  million at the minimum and $186.7 million at the maximum of the offering
range (and  $214.9  million at the  maximum,  as  adjusted,  if the  independent
valuation is increased by 15%).

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.  intends  to use the  net  proceeds  from  the
offering as follows:



                                                                                                                   MAXIMUM,
                                              MINIMUM               MIDPOINT                    MAXIMUM          As Adjusted
                                     ---------------------  -----------------------  ---------------------- ----------------------
                                                  Percent                 Percent                  Percent                Percent
                                                   of Net                  of Net                   of Net                 of Net
                                        Amount    Proceeds     Amount     Proceeds      Amount     Proceeds    Amount    Proceeds
                                        ------    --------     ------     --------      ------     --------    ------    --------
                                                                                (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                            
Gross offering proceeds.........       $140,250               $165,000                 $189,750               $218,213
Less offering expenses..........         (2,585)                (2,813)                  (3,041)                (3,303)
                                        -------                -------                  -------                -------
   Estimated net proceeds.......        137,665    100.0%      162,187     100.0%       186,709     100.0%     214,910     100.0%
Less:
Investment in Kearny
    Federal Savings Bank........         68,833     50.0%       81,094      50.0%        93,355      50.0%     107,455      50.0%
Loan to employee
     stock ownership plan.......         11,220      8.2%       13,200       8.1%        15,180       8.1%      17,457       8.1%
                                        -------                -------                  -------                -------
Proceeds retained by
   Kearny Financial Corp........        $57,612     41.8%      $67,893      41.9%       $78,174      41.9%     $89,998      41.9%
                                         ======                 ======                   ======                 ======


         We will use 50% of the net proceeds from the offering to make a capital
contribution  to Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank.  We will  also lend the  Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank's employee stock ownership plan cash to enable the plan to
buy up to 8% of the shares sold in the offering. If the employee stock ownership
plan does not purchase  common stock in the offering,  it may purchase shares of
common stock in the open market after the stock offering.  If the purchase price
of the  common  stock is higher  than $10 per  share,  the  amount  of  proceeds
required for the purchase by the employee stock ownership plan will increase and
the  resulting  stockholders'  equity  will  decrease.  The  balance  of the net
proceeds  will be  retained  by  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and used for  general
business  purposes,  which may include  investment in  securities,  repurchasing
shares of our common stock,  paying cash  dividends or supporting  acquisitions.
However,  under current regulations of the Office of Thrift Supervision,  we may
not  repurchase  shares of our common stock during the first year  following the
offering,  except  where  extraordinary   circumstances  exist  and  with  prior
regulatory  approval.  We will  initially  invest  these  proceeds  in  short to
intermediate term investment securities.

         The funds  received  by Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank will be used for
general  business   purposes,   including   originating   loans  and  purchasing
securities.  In addition to building our core banking  business through internal
growth  and  de  novo  branching,  we  will  also  actively  consider  expansion
opportunities  such  as the  acquisition  of  branches  and of  other  financial
institutions. We do not, however, have any current understandings, agreements or
arrangements for expansion by the acquisition of any branches or other financial
institutions.  There  can  be  no  assurance  that  we  will  be  successful  in
implementing this growth strategy. We may have difficulty finding suitable sites
for de novo branches and  identifying  and  successfully  acquiring  branches or
other  financial  institutions.  We may also pursue other  business  activities,
including  possibly  offering  asset  management  services,  acquiring  a  title
insurance company and/or acquiring

                                       21



a mortgage banking  operation.  There are, however,  no current  understandings,
arrangements or agreements for these activities and we cannot assure you that we
will commence such activities.

         The net proceeds may vary  significantly  because total expenses of the
stock offering may be significantly  more or less than those estimated.  The net
proceeds  will  also  vary if the  number  of  shares  to be issued in the stock
offering is adjusted to reflect a change in the estimated pro forma market value
of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  Payments for shares made through  withdrawals  from
existing  deposit accounts at Kearny Federal Savings Bank will not result in the
receipt of new funds for  investment  but will result in a  reduction  of Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank's  deposits and interest  expense as funds are transferred
from interest-bearing certificates or other deposit accounts.

                         OUR POLICY REGARDING DIVIDENDS

         We intend to pay  dividends  but have not yet  established a definitive
dividend policy or determined the amount or timing of cash dividends that Kearny
Financial Corp. may pay after the offering.  Future declarations of dividends by
the Board of Directors will depend on a number of factors,  including investment
opportunities,   growth  objectives,  financial  condition,  profitability,  tax
considerations,  minimum capital  requirements,  regulatory  limitations,  stock
market  characteristics and general economic conditions.  The timing,  frequency
and  amount  of  dividends  will be  determined  by the  Board.  There can be no
assurance  that  dividends  will in fact be paid on the stock or that,  if paid,
dividends will not be reduced or eliminated in future periods.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  ability to pay dividends may also depend on
the receipt of dividends from Kearny Federal Savings Bank, which is subject to a
variety of regulatory limitations on the payment of dividends.  See Regulation -
Regulation  of  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank  -  Dividend  and  Other  Capital
Distribution  Limitations on page 96. Furthermore,  as a condition to the Office
of Thrift  Supervision  giving its  authorization to conduct the stock offering,
Kearny  Financial  Corp.  has agreed that it will not initiate any action within
one year of completion of the stock offering in the  furtherance of payment of a
special  distribution or return of capital to  stockholders of Kearny  Financial
Corp.

         If Kearny  Financial  Corp. pays dividends to its  stockholders,  it is
anticipated that dividends  payable to Kearny MHC would be waived.  Under Office
of Thrift Supervision regulations,  public stockholders would not be diluted for
any  dividends  waived by Kearny MHC in the event that  Kearny MHC  converts  to
stock form. See Regulation - Regulation of Kearny Financial Corp. on page 100.

                              MARKET FOR THE STOCK

         There is not,  at this time,  any market for Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s
stock. We have received  approval to have our common stock listed for trading on
the Nasdaq  National Market under the symbol "KRNY." Sandler O'Neill & Partners,
L.P.  has  advised  us that it  intends  to make a market  in our  common  stock
following the offering, but it is under no obligation to do so.

         The development of an active trading market depends on the existence of
willing buyers and sellers,  the presence of which is not within our control, or
that of any market  maker.  The number of active buyers and sellers of our stock
at any particular time may be limited. Under such circumstances,  you could have
difficulty  selling your shares of common  stock.  We cannot  assure you that an
active and liquid trading market for the shares of common stock will develop or,
if developed,  will be  maintained.  Nor can we assure you that, if you purchase
shares of common stock in the offering, you will be able to sell them at a price
equal to or above $10.00 per share.

                                       22



                                 CAPITALIZATION

         Set forth below is the  historical  capitalization  as of September 30,
2004 of  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and the pro  forma  capitalization  of Kearny
Financial  Corp.  as of September  30, 2004 after giving effect to the offering.
The table also gives effect to the assumptions set forth under Pro Forma Data on
pages 24 to 30. A change  in the  number  of  shares  sold in the  offering  may
materially affect the pro forma capitalization.



                                                                          Pro Forma Capitalization at September 30, 2004
                                                                     -------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Kearny                                                           Maximum,
                                                    Financial          Minimum          Midpoint       Maximum        as adjusted
                                                      Corp.           14,025,000       16,500,000     18,975,000      21,821,250 
                                                  Historical, at      shares sold      shares sold    shares sold    shares sold
                                                   September 30,      at $10.00         at $10.00      at $10.00      at $10.00
                                                       2004           per share        per share         per share    per share(1)
                                                       ----           ---------        ---------         ---------    ------------
                                                                                   (In thousands)
                                                                                                            
Deposits(2)....................................         $1,510,810     $1,510,810     $1,510,810      $1,510,810      $1,510,810
Borrowed funds.................................             84,100         84,100         84,100          84,100          84,100
                                                        ----------     ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------
Total deposits and borrowed funds..............         $1,594,910     $1,594,910     $1,594,910      $1,594,910      $1,594,910
                                                        ==========     ==========     ==========      ==========      ==========
Stockholders' equity:
  Preferred stock, $0.10 par value,
    25,000,000 shares authorized;
    none to be issued..........................                  -              -              -               -               -
  Common stock, $0.10 par value,
    75,000,000 shares authorized,
    assuming shares outstanding
    as shown(3)(4)(5)..........................                  1          4,675          5,500           6,325           7,274
Additional paid-in capital(3)(4)(5)............                499        133,490        157,187         180,884         208,136
Retained earnings..............................            286,755        286,755        286,755         286,755         286,755
Accumulated other comprehensive
   income, net of tax..........................             10,547         10,547         10,547          10,547          10,547
Less:
  Common stock acquired by
    employee stock ownership plan(6)...........                  -        (11,220)       (13,200)        (15,180)        (17,457)
  Common stock acquired by restricted
     stock plan(7).............................                  -        (9,163)       (10,780)        (12,397)        (14,257)
                                                        ----------     ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------
Total stockholders' equity.....................         $  297,802     $  415,084     $  436,009      $  456,934      $  480,998
                                                        ==========     ==========     ==========      ==========      ==========


------------
(1)  As  adjusted  to give  effect to an  increase  in the number of shares sold
     which could occur due to an increase  in the  independent  valuation  and a
     commensurate increase in the offering range of up to 15% to reflect changes
     in market and financial conditions.

(2)  Does not reflect  withdrawals  from  deposit  accounts  for the purchase of
     stock in the offering.  Any withdrawals  would reduce pro forma deposits by
     an amount equal to the withdrawals.

(3)  Pro forma data includes shares to be held by Kearny MHC after completion of
     the stock offering.  Kearny MHC is currently the sole stockholder of Kearny
     Financial Corp. and holds 10,000 shares of common stock of Kearny Financial
     Corp.  Upon  completion  of the  offering,  Kearny MHC will hold 70% of the
     total shares of Kearny Financial Corp. to be outstanding.

(4)  No effect  has been given to the  issuance  of  additional  shares of stock
     pursuant to any stock  option plan that may be adopted by Kearny  Financial
     Corp. and presented for approval by the stockholders after the offering. An
     amount  equal to 4.9% of the total number of shares  outstanding  after the
     offering,  including  the shares held by Kearny MHC,  would be reserved for
     issuance  upon the exercise of options to be granted under the stock option
     plan following the stock offering. See Management - Potential Stock Benefit
     Plans - Stock Option Plan on page 113.

                                       23



(5)  The historical  additional  paid-in  capital amount  represents the initial
     capitalization  of the mid-tier  holding company upon its formation in 2001
     ($500,000  was received by Kearny  Financial  Corp.  for the 10,000  shares
     issued to Kearny MHC). The pro forma  additional  paid-in  capital  amounts
     include  this initial  $500,000  capitalization.  The pro forma  additional
     paid-in  capital  amounts are net of stock offering  expenses and represent
     the amount  paid for the shares  sold in the  offering at $10.00 per share,
     less the par value of outstanding shares. Because Kearny Financial Corp. is
     selling only 30% of the total shares to be outstanding  upon  completion of
     the offering,  the additional  paid-in capital  represents the net proceeds
     for the  sale of those  shares,  less  the par  value of all of the  shares
     outstanding upon completion of the offering  including the shares that will
     be held by Kearny MHC. For example, at the midpoint, 55,000,000 shares will
     be outstanding  upon completion of the offering,  30% of which  (16,500,000
     shares)  would  have been sold at $10.00  per share for gross  proceeds  of
     $165,000,000.  With estimated stock offering  expenses of $2,813,000 at the
     midpoint,  estimated net proceeds are $162,187,000.  The additional paid-in
     capital at the midpoint  represents the net proceeds of  $162,187,000  plus
     the existing capital of $500,000 (totaling $162,687,000) less the par value
     of  55,000,000  shares,  or  $5,500,000,  resulting in  additional  paid-in
     capital of $157,187,000.

(6)  Assumes that 8% of the shares sold in the offering will be purchased by the
     employee  stock  ownership  plan,  and that the funds used to  acquire  the
     employee stock ownership plan shares will be borrowed from Kearny Financial
     Corp.,  concurrent with the offering.  For an estimate of the impact of the
     loan on  earnings,  see Pro Forma  Data on pages 24 to 30.  Kearny  Federal
     Savings Bank intends to make scheduled  discretionary  contributions to the
     employee stock  ownership plan sufficient to enable the plan to service and
     repay its debt over a ten year period.  The amount of shares to be acquired
     by the  employee  stock  ownership  plan is  reflected  as a  reduction  of
     stockholders'  equity.  See  Management - Potential  Stock  Benefit Plans -
     Employee Stock  Ownership Plan on page 113. If the employee stock ownership
     plan  is  unable  to  purchase  stock  in  the  stock  offering  due  to an
     oversubscription  in the offering by eligible  account holders having first
     priority,  and the  purchase  price in the open market is greater  than the
     original $10.00 price per share, there will be a corresponding reduction in
     stockholders'  equity.  See The Stock  Offering -  Subscription  Offering -
     Subscription Rights on page 119.

(7)  Assumes  that an  amount  equal to  1.96% of the  total  number  of  shares
     outstanding after the offering, including the shares held by Kearny MHC, is
     purchased by the restricted  stock plan following the stock  offering.  The
     stock purchased by the restricted stock plan is reflected as a reduction of
     stockholders' equity. See footnote (2) to the table under Pro Forma Data on
     pages 24 to 30.

                                 PRO FORMA DATA

         The actual net proceeds from the sale of the stock cannot be determined
until the  offering is  completed.  However,  investable  net proceeds to Kearny
Financial  Corp.  are currently  estimated to be between  $117.3  million at the
minimum and $159.1  million at the maximum of the offering  range,  respectively
(or $183.2 million at the maximum, as adjusted,  if the independent valuation is
increased by 15%), based on the following assumptions:

o    shares  sold  in the  offering  will be sold  in  either  the  subscription
     offering  or the  community  offering,  with  no  shares  being  sold  in a
     syndicated community offering;

o    an amount  equal to the cost of  purchasing  8% of the  shares  sold in the
     offering will be loaned to the employee  stock  ownership  plan to fund its
     purchase at an assumed purchase price of $10.00 per share;

o    an  amount  equal to 1.96%  of the  total  number  of  outstanding  shares,
     including the shares held by Kearny MHC, will be acquired by the restricted
     stock plan through open market  purchases at an assumed  purchase  price of
     $10.00 per share; and

o    expenses  of the  offering,  including  the fees and  expenses  of  Sandler
     O'Neill & Partners, L.P., are estimated to be approximately $2.6 million at
     the minimum and $3.0  million at the  maximum of the  offering  range ($3.3
     million at the maximum, as adjusted).

         The following tables set forth Kearny Financial Corp.'s  historical net
income and  stockholders'  equity prior to the offering and pro forma net income
and  stockholders'  equity  giving effect to the  offering.  In preparing  these
tables  and  in  calculating   pro  forma  data,  we  have  made  the  following
assumptions:

                                       24



o    Pro forma earnings have been calculated assuming the stock had been sold at
     the  beginning of the period and the net  proceeds had been  invested at an
     average yield of 2.16% for the three months ended September 30, 2004 and at
     an average  yield of 2.09% for the year ended June 30, 2004,  respectively,
     which  approximates the yield on a one-year U.S. Treasury bill on September
     30,  2004 and June 30,  2004,  respectively.  The yield on a one-year  U.S.
     Treasury  bill,  rather than an arithmetic  average of the average yield on
     interest-earning  assets and the average  rate paid on  deposits,  has been
     used to  estimate  income  on net  proceeds  because  we  believe  that the
     one-year U.S.  Treasury  bill rate is a more accurate  estimate of the rate
     that would be obtained on an  investment of net proceeds from the offering.
     The pro forma  after-tax  yield on the net  proceeds is assumed to be 1.28%
     for the three months ended  September 30, 2004 and 1.24% for the year ended
     June 30, 2004, respectively.

o    We assumed that 8% of the shares sold in the offering were purchased in the
     offering by Kearny Federal  Savings Bank's employee stock ownership plan at
     a price of $10.00 per share using  funds  borrowed  from  Kearny  Financial
     Corp.  We assumed  that  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank  would make  annual
     contributions  to the plan in an amount at least equal to the principal and
     interest  requirement  of the loan. We have assumed a 10-year  amortization
     period for the loan.  The stock  acquired by the employee  stock  ownership
     plan is reflected as a reduction of stockholders'  equity. See Management -
     Potential Stock Benefit Plans - Employee Stock Ownership Plan on page 113.

o    We assumed that the stock option plan had been approved by  stockholders of
     Kearny  Financial  Corp. and that Kearny  Financial  Corp. had reserved for
     future  issuance  upon the exercise of options to be granted under the plan
     an amount of stock equal to 4.9% of the total number of shares  outstanding
     after the  offering,  including  shares held by Kearny  MHC, or  2,290,750,
     2,695,000,  3,099,250 and 3,564,138 shares of stock,  respectively,  at the
     minimum,  midpoint,  maximum  and 15% above the  maximum of the  range.  We
     assumed that options for all shares reserved under the plan were granted to
     plan  participants  at the  beginning  of the  period  and  that 30% of the
     options  granted were  non-qualified  options for income tax  purposes.  We
     assumed  that  the  options  would  vest at a rate of 20% per year and that
     compensation  expense would be recognized on a straight-line basis over the
     5-year vesting  period.  See  Management - Potential  Stock Benefit Plans -
     Stock Option Plan on page 114.

o    We assumed that the restricted stock plan had been approved by stockholders
     of Kearny  Financial Corp. and that the restricted  stock plan had acquired
     an amount of stock equal to 1.96% of the total number of shares outstanding
     after the  offering,  including  shares  held by Kearny  MHC,  or  916,300,
     1,078,000,  1,239,700 and 1,425,655 shares of stock,  respectively,  at the
     minimum,  midpoint,  maximum  and 15% above the maximum of the range at the
     beginning of the periods presented through open market purchases at a price
     of $10.00 per share using funds contributed to the restricted stock plan by
     Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank. We assumed that all shares held by the plan
     were granted to plan participants at the beginning of the period,  that the
     shares would vest at a rate of 20% per year and that  compensation  expense
     will be recognized on a straight-line basis over the 5-year vesting period.
     See Management - Potential  Stock Benefit Plans - Restricted  Stock Plan on
     page 115.

o    An effective  tax rate of 40.85% is used in  calculating  the pro-forma net
     income  because that is the marginal  effective tax rate. The effective tax
     rates of 29.15% for the three  months ended  September  30, 2004 and 30.82%
     for the year ended June 30,  2004 as stated in Note 15 to the  consolidated
     financial  statements  takes into account the effect of  tax-exempt  income
     from obligations of state and political subdivisions.

o    We did not include any withdrawals from deposit accounts to purchase shares
     in the offering.

                                       25



o    Historical and pro forma per share amounts have been calculated by dividing
     historical  and pro  forma  amounts  by the  indicated  number of shares of
     stock,  as adjusted in the pro forma net  earnings per share to give effect
     to the purchase of shares by the employee stock ownership plan.

o    Pro forma stockholders' equity amounts have been calculated as if the stock
     had been sold on September 30, 2004 and June 30, 2004, respectively, and no
     effect has been given to the assumed earnings effect of the transaction.

         The  following  pro forma data  relies on the  assumptions  we outlined
above,  and this data does not  represent  the fair  market  value of the common
stock,  the current value of assets or liabilities,  or the amount of money that
would be distributed to stockholders if Kearny  Financial Corp. were liquidated.
The pro forma data does not  predict  how much we will earn in the  future.  You
should  not  use  the  following   information  to  predict  future  results  of
operations.

         The tables on the following  pages  summarize  historical and pro forma
data of Kearny  Financial  Corp. at or for the three months ended  September 30,
2004 and the year ended June 30, 2004,  respectively,  based on the  assumptions
set forth above and in the notes to the tables and should not be used as a basis
for projections of market value of the stock  following the stock offering.  Pro
forma  stockholders'  equity per share does not take into  account the effect of
intangible  assets or the impact of the bad debt  allowance if Kearny  Financial
Corp. were liquidated.  Pro forma tangible  stockholders'  equity per share does
take into account the effect of intangible assets.

                                       26





                                                             At or For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2004
                                                      -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                           Maximum,
                                                          Minimum         Midpoint          Maximum       as adjusted
                                                        14,025,000       16,500,000       18,975,000       21,821,250
                                                        shares sold      shares sold      shares sold      shares sold
                                                         at $10.00        at $10.00        at $10.00       at $10.00
                                                         per share        per share        per share        per share
                                                         ---------        ---------        ---------        ---------
                                                         (Dollars in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

                                                                                                     
Gross proceeds .....................................   $    140,250     $    165,000     $    189,750     $    218,213
Less expenses ......................................         (2,585)          (2,813)          (3,041)          (3,303)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Estimated net proceeds ..........................        137,665          162,187          186,709          214,910
Less ESOP funded by Kearny Financial Corp. .........        (11,220)         (13,200)         (15,180)         (17,457)
Less restricted stock plan adjustment ..............         (9,163)         (10,780)         (12,397)         (14,257)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Estimated investable net proceeds ...............   $    117,282     $    138,207     $    159,132     $    183,196
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Net Income:
   Historical ......................................   $      3,796     $      3,796     $      3,796     $      3,796
   Pro forma income on net proceeds ................            375              441              508              585
   Pro forma ESOP adjustment(1) ....................           (166)            (195)            (224)            (258)
   Pro forma option adjustment(2) ..................           (398)            (468)            (538)            (619)
   Pro forma restricted stock plan adjustment(3) ...           (271)            (319)            (367)            (422)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma net income(1)(2)(3)(4) ................   $      3,336     $      3,255     $      3,175     $      3,082
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Per share net income:
   Historical ......................................   $       0.08     $       0.07     $       0.06     $       0.05
   Pro forma income on net proceeds ................           0.01             0.01             0.01             0.01
   Pro forma ESOP adjustment(1) ....................          (0.00)           (0.00)           (0.00)           (0.00)
   Pro forma option adjustment(2) ..................          (0.01)           (0.01)           (0.01)           (0.01)
   Pro forma restricted stock plan adjustment(3) ...          (0.01)           (0.01)           (0.01)           (0.01)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma net income per share ..................   $       0.07     $       0.06     $       0.05     $       0.04
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Shares used in calculation of income per share(5) ..     45,642,025       53,696,500       61,750,975       71,013,621

Stockholders' equity:
   Historical ......................................   $    297,802     $    297,802     $    297,802     $    297,802
   Estimated net proceeds ..........................        137,665          162,187          186,709          214,910
   Less: Common Stock acquired by the ESOP(1) ......        (11,220)         (13,200)         (15,180)         (17,457)
   Less: Common Stock acquired by the restricted
            stock plan(3) ..........................         (9,163)         (10,780)         (12,397)         (14,257)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma stockholders' equity(4) ...............   $    415,084     $    436,009     $    456,934     $    480,998
   Intangible assets ...............................         84,304           84,304           84,304           84,304
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma tangible stockholders' equity(4) ......   $    330,780     $    351,705     $    372,630     $    396,694
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Stockholders' equity per share:
   Historical ......................................   $       6.37     $       5.41     $       4.71     $       4.09
   Estimated net proceeds ..........................           2.94             2.95             2.95             2.95
   Less: Common Stock acquired by the ESOP(1) ......          (0.24)           (0.24)           (0.24)           (0.24)
   Less: Common stock acquired by the restricted
            stock plan(3) ..........................          (0.20)           (0.20)           (0.20)           (0.20)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma stockholders' equity per share ........   $       8.87     $       7.92     $       7.22     $       6.60
   Intangible assets ...............................           1.80             1.53             1.33             1.16
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma tangible stockholders' equity per share   $       7.07     $       6.39     $       5.89     $       5.44
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============
Offering price as a percentage of pro forma
  stockholders' equity per share ...................         112.74%          126.26%          138.50%          151.52%
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============
Offering price as a percentage of pro forma tangible
  stockholders' equity per share ...................         141.44%          156.49%          169.78%          183.82%
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============
Offering price to pro forma net income per share ...          35.71x           41.67x           50.00x           62.50x
Shares used in calculation of stockholders' equity
  per share(5) .....................................     46,750,000       55,000,000       63,250,000       72,737,500


                                       27

------------
(1)  The pro forma net earnings assumes:  (i) that Kearny Federal Savings Bank's
     contribution to the employee stock ownership plan for the principal portion
     of the debt service  requirement  for the three months ended  September 30,
     2004  was made at the end of the  period;  and (ii)  that  28,050,  33,000,
     37,950 and 43,643 shares at the minimum,  midpoint,  maximum, and 15% above
     the  maximum of the range,  respectively,  were  committed  to be  released
     during the three months ended  September 30, 2004, at an average fair value
     of $10.00 per share and were  accounted for as a charge to expense.  If the
     fair market value per share at the time shares are committed to be released
     is different than $10.00 per share, the related expense  recognized will be
     different.

(2)  The pro forma net income  assumes that the options  granted under the stock
     option plan have a value of $3.96 per option,  which was  determined  using
     the  Black-Scholes-Merton   option  pricing  formula  using  the  following
     assumptions:  (i) the trading  price on date of grant was $10.00 per share;
     (ii)  exercise  price is equal to the  trading  price on the date of grant;
     (iii)  dividend  yield of 0%; (iv) expected life of 10 years;  (v) expected
     volatility of 16.57%; and risk-free  interest rate of 4.27%.  Because there
     is currently  no market for Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  common  stock,  the
     assumed expected volatility is based on the SNL Financial MHC index. If the
     fair market value per share on the date of grant is different  than $10.00,
     or if the assumptions used in the option pricing formula are different from
     those used in preparing  this pro forma data,  the value of the options and
     the related expense recognized will be different. There can be no assurance
     that the  actual  fair  market  value per  share on the date of grant,  and
     correspondingly  the  exercise  price of the  options,  will be $10.00  per
     share.  The issuance of authorized but unissued  shares of stock instead of
     open market  purchases to fund exercises of options granted under the stock
     option plan would dilute the voting  interests of existing  stockholders by
     approximately 4.67%. See Management - Potential Stock Benefit Plans - Stock
     Option Plan on page 114.

(3)  The issuance of authorized  but unissued  shares of stock to the restricted
     stock  plan  instead  of open  market  purchases  would  dilute  the voting
     interests of existing  stockholders by  approximately  1.92%, pro forma net
     income per share for the three  months  ended  September  30, 2004 would be
     $0.07,  $0.06,  $0.05 and $0.04 at the minimum,  midpoint,  maximum and 15%
     above the maximum of the range,  respectively,  and pro forma stockholders'
     equity per share at  September  30, 2004 would be $8.90,  $7.97,  $7.28 and
     $6.68 at the  minimum,  midpoint,  maximum and 15% above the maximum of the
     range,  respectively.  If the  actual  cost of the shares  acquired  by the
     restricted  stock plan is  different  than  $10.00 per share,  the  expense
     recognized  will be different.  There can be no assurance that  stockholder
     approval of the  restricted  stock plan will be obtained or that the actual
     purchase  price of the  shares  will be  equal to  $10.00  per  share.  See
     Management - Potential Stock Benefit Plans - Restricted  Stock Plan on page
     115.

(4)  The retained  earnings of Kearny Financial Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings
     Bank will continue to be substantially restricted after the stock offering.
     See Our Policy  Regarding  Dividends on page 22 and Regulation - Regulation
     of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank - Dividends and Other Capital  Distribution
     Limitations on page 96.

(5)  For purposes of calculating  net income per share,  only the employee stock
     ownership  plan  shares  committed  to be  released  under  the  plan  were
     considered  outstanding.  For purposes of calculating  stockholders' equity
     per share, all employee stock ownership shares were considered outstanding.
     We have also  assumed that no options  granted  under the stock option plan
     were  exercised  during  the period  and that the  trading  price of Kearny
     Financial Corp. common stock at the end of the period was $10.00 per share.
     Under this  assumption,  using the treasury  stock  method,  no  additional
     shares  of  stock  were  considered  to  be  outstanding  for  purposes  of
     calculating earnings per share or stockholders' equity per share.

                                       28





                                                                     At or For the Year Ended June 30, 2004
                                                       ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                            Maximum,
                                                           Minimum        Midpoint          Maximum       as adjusted
                                                         14,025,000      16,500,000       18,975,000       21,821,250
                                                         shares sold     shares sold      shares sold      shares sold
                                                          at $10.00       at $10.00        at $10.00       at $10.00
                                                          per share       per share        per share        per share
                                                          ---------       ---------        ---------        ---------
                                                           (Dollars in thousands, except share and per share amounts)
                                                                                                     
Gross proceeds .....................................   $    140,250     $    165,000     $    189,750     $    218,213
Less expenses ......................................         (2,585)          (2,813)          (3,041)          (3,303)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Estimated net proceeds ..........................        137,665          162,187          186,709          214,910
Less ESOP funded by Kearny Financial Corp. .........        (11,220)         (13,200)         (15,180)         (17,457)
Less restricted stock plan adjustment ..............         (9,163)         (10,780)         (12,397)         (14,257)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Estimated investable net proceeds ...............   $    117,282     $    138,207     $    159,132     $    183,196
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Net Income:
   Historical ......................................   $     12,897     $     12,897     $     12,897     $     12,897
   Pro forma income on net proceeds ................          1,450            1,709            1,967            2,265
   Pro forma ESOP adjustment(1) ....................           (664)            (781)            (898)          (1,033)
   Pro forma option adjustment(2) ..................         (1,592)          (1,873)          (2,154)          (2,477)
   Pro forma restricted stock plan adjustment(3) ...         (1,084)          (1,275)          (1,467)          (1,687)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma net income(1)(2)(3)(4) ................   $     11,007     $     10,677     $     10,345     $      9,965
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Per share net income:
   Historical ......................................   $       0.28     $       0.24     $       0.21     $       0.18
   Pro forma income on net proceeds ................           0.03             0.03             0.03             0.03
   Pro forma ESOP adjustment(1) ....................          (0.01)           (0.01)           (0.01)           (0.01)
   Pro forma option adjustment(2) ..................          (0.04)           (0.04)           (0.04)           (0.04)
   Pro forma restricted stock plan adjustment(3) ...          (0.02)           (0.02)           (0.02)           (0.02)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma net income per share ..................   $       0.24     $       0.20     $       0.17     $       0.14
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Shares used in calculation of income per share(5) ..     45,684,100       53,746,000       61,807,900       71,079,085

Stockholders' equity:
   Historical ......................................   $    293,505     $    293,505     $    293,505     $    293,505
   Estimated net proceeds ..........................        137,665          162,187          186,709          214,910
   Less: Common Stock acquired by the ESOP(1) ......        (11,220)         (13,200)         (15,180)         (17,457)
   Less: Common Stock acquired by the restricted
            stock plan(3) ..........................         (9,163)         (10,780)         (12,397)         (14,257)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma stockholders' equity(4) ...............        410,787          431,712          452,637          476,701
   Intangible assets ...............................         84,463           84,463           84,463           84,463
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma tangible stockholders' equity(4) ......   $    326,324     $    347,249     $    368,174     $    392,238
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============

Stockholders' equity per share:
   Historical ......................................   $       6.28     $       5.34     $       4.64     $       4.04
   Estimated net proceeds ..........................           2.94             2.95             2.95             2.95
   Less: Common Stock acquired by the ESOP(1) ......          (0.24)           (0.24)           (0.24)           (0.24)
   Less: Common stock acquired by the restricted
            stock plan(3) ..........................          (0.20)           (0.20)           (0.20)           (0.20)
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma stockholders' equity per share ........           8.78             7.85             7.15             6.55
   Intangible assets ...............................           1.81             1.54             1.34             1.16
                                                       ------------     ------------     ------------     ------------
   Pro forma tangible stockholders' equity per share   $       6.97     $       6.31     $       5.81     $       5.39
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============
Offering price as a percentage of pro forma
  stockholders' equity per share ...................         113.90%          127.39%          139.86%          152.67%
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============
Offering price as a percentage of pro forma tangible
  stockholders' equity per share ...................         143.47%          158.48%          172.12%          185.53%
                                                       ============     ============     ============     ============
Offering price to pro forma net income per share ...          41.67x           50.00x           58.82x           71.43x
Shares used in calculation of stockholders' equity
  per share(5) .....................................     46,750,000       55,000,000       63,250,000       72,737,500


                                       29


--------------
(1)  The pro forma net earnings assumes:  (i) that Kearny Federal Savings Bank's
     contribution to the employee stock ownership plan for the principal portion
     of the debt service  requirement  for the year ended June 30, 2004 was made
     at the end of the  period;  and (ii) that  112,200,  132,000,  151,800  and
     174,570 shares at the minimum, midpoint, maximum, and 15% above the maximum
     of the range,  respectively,  were committed to be released during the year
     ended June 30, 2004,  at an average fair value of $10.00 per share and were
     accounted for as a charge to expense. If the fair market value per share at
     the time shares are  committed to be released is different  than $10.00 per
     share, the related expense recognized will be different.

(2)  The pro forma net income  assumes that the options  granted under the stock
     option plan have a value of $3.96 per option,  which was  determined  using
     the  Black-Scholes-Merton   option  pricing  formula  using  the  following
     assumptions:  (i) the trading  price on date of grant was $10.00 per share;
     (ii)  exercise  price is equal to the  trading  price on the date of grant;
     (iii)  dividend  yield of 0%; (iv) expected life of 10 years;  (v) expected
     volatility of 16.57%; and risk-free  interest rate of 4.27%.  Because there
     is currently  no market for Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  common  stock,  the
     assumed expected volatility is based on the SNL Financial MHC index. If the
     fair market value per share on the date of grant is different  than $10.00,
     or if the assumptions used in the option pricing formula are different from
     those used in preparing  this pro forma data,  the value of the options and
     the related expense recognized will be different. There can be no assurance
     that the  actual  fair  market  value per  share on the date of grant,  and
     correspondingly  the  exercise  price of the  options,  will be $10.00  per
     share.  The issuance of authorized but unissued  shares of stock instead of
     open market  purchases to fund exercises of options granted under the stock
     option plan would dilute the voting  interests of existing  stockholders by
     approximately 4.67%. See Management - Potential Stock Benefit Plans - Stock
     Option Plan on page 114.

(3)  The issuance of authorized  but unissued  shares of stock to the restricted
     stock  plan  instead  of open  market  purchases  would  dilute  the voting
     interests of existing  stockholders by  approximately  1.92%, pro forma net
     income per share for the year ended  June 30,  2004 would be $0.24,  $0.19,
     $0.16 and $0.14 at the minimum, midpoint, maximum and 15% above the maximum
     of the range, respectively, and pro forma stockholders' equity per share at
     June 30,  2004  would be $8.81,  $7.89,  $7.21  and  $6.62 at the  minimum,
     midpoint, maximum and 15% above the maximum of the range, respectively.  If
     the actual  cost of the shares  acquired  by the  restricted  stock plan is
     different than $10.00 per share, the expense  recognized will be different.
     There can be no assurance that stockholder approval of the restricted stock
     plan will be obtained or that the actual  purchase price of the shares will
     be equal to $10.00 per share.  See  Management  - Potential  Stock  Benefit
     Plans - Restricted Stock Plan on page 115.

(4)  The retained  earnings of Kearny Financial Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings
     Bank will continue to be substantially restricted after the stock offering.
     See Our Policy  Regarding  Dividends on page 22 and Regulation - Regulation
     of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank - Dividends and Other Capital  Distribution
     Limitations on page 96.

(5)  For purposes of calculating  net income per share,  only the employee stock
     ownership  plan  shares  committed  to be  released  under  the  plan  were
     considered  outstanding.  For purposes of calculating  stockholders' equity
     per share, all employee stock ownership shares were considered outstanding.
     We have also  assumed that no options  granted  under the stock option plan
     were  exercised  during  the period  and that the  trading  price of Kearny
     Financial Corp. common stock at the end of the period was $10.00 per share.
     Under this  assumption,  using the treasury  stock  method,  no  additional
     shares  of  stock  were  considered  to  be  outstanding  for  purposes  of
     calculating earnings per share or stockholders' equity per share.

                                       29



                   HISTORICAL AND PRO FORMA CAPITAL COMPLIANCE

         The following table presents  Kearny Federal Savings Bank's  historical
and pro forma capital position relative to its regulatory  capital  requirements
as of September  30, 2004.  Pro forma capital  levels  assume  receipt by Kearny
Federal  Savings  Bank  of 50% of the  net  proceeds.  For a  discussion  of the
assumptions  underlying the pro forma capital calculations  presented below, see
Use of  Proceeds,  Capitalization  and Pro  Forma  Data on pages  24 to 30.  The
definitions  of the terms used in the table are those  provided  in the  capital
regulations issued by the Office of Thrift Supervision.  For a discussion of the
capital  standards  applicable to Kearny Federal  Savings Bank, see Regulation -
Regulation of Kearny Federal Savings Bank - Regulatory  Capital  Requirements on
page 94.



                                                                              Pro Forma at September 30, 2004
                                                                     -------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    Minimum                        Midpoint       
                                                    Actual, at               14,025,000 shares sold         16,500,000 shares sold
                                                September 30, 2004             at $10.00 per share            at $10.00 per share 
                                          ------------------------------ ------------------------------ --------------------------
                                                           Percentage                      Percentage                 Percentage  
                                              Amount      of Assets(2)       Amount       of Assets(2)      Amount   of Assets(2) 
                                              ------      ------------       ------       ------------      ------   ------------ 
                                                                         (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                                          

GAAP Capital(3).........................     $296,271          15.57%       $344,721          17.57%       $353,385      17.91%

Tangible Capital........................     $201,420          11.15%       $249,870          13.40%       $258,534      13.78%
Tangible Capital Requirement............       27,085           1.50          27,980           1.50          28,140       1.50
                                              -------          -----         -------          -----         -------      -----
Excess..................................     $174,335           9.65%       $221,890          11.90%       $230,394      12.28%
                                              =======          =====         =======          =====         =======      ===== 

Core Capital............................     $201,420          11.15%       $249,870          13.40%       $258,534      13.78%
Core Capital Requirement(4).............       54,170           3.00          55,960           3.00          56,280       3.00
                                              -------          -----         -------          -----         -------      -----
Excess..................................     $147,250           8.15%       $193,910          10.40%       $202,254      10.78%
                                              =======          =====         =======          =====         =======      ===== 

Total Risk-Based Capital(5)(6)..........     $213,667          33.18%       $262,117          39.96%       $270,781      41.15%
Risk-Based Capital Requirement..........       51,522           8.00          52,477           8.00          52,647       8.00
                                              -------          -----         -------          -----         -------      -----
Excess..................................     $162,145          25.18%       $209,640          31.96%       $218,134      33.15%
                                              =======          =====         =======          =====         =======      ===== 

Reconciliation of capital infused into
     Kearny Federal Savings Bank:
Net proceeds infused....................                                    $ 68,833                       $ 81,094            
Less:
   Common stock acquired by
      employee stock ownership plan.....                                      11,220                         13,200            
   Common stock acquired by
      restricted stock plan.............                                       9,163                         10,780            
                                                                             -------                        -------            
Pro forma increase in GAAP and
   regulatory capital...................                                    $ 48,450                       $ 57,114            
                                                                             =======                        =======            

                                                         Pro Forma at September 30, 2004
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Maximum                   Maximum, as adjusted
                                               18,975 shares sold            21,821,250 shares sold
                                              at $10.00 per share            at $10.00 per share (1)
                                           -------------------------        ---------------------------
                                                        Percentage                        Percentage
                                           Amount       of Assets (2)       Amount       of Assets (2)
                                           ------       -------------       ------       --------------
                                                                                 
GAAP Capital(3).........................   $362,049         18.25%         $372,012        18.64%  

Tangible Capital........................   $267,198         14.16%         $277,161        14.60%  
Tangible Capital Requirement............     28,300          1.50            28,483         1.50  
Excess..................................    -------         -----           -------        -----  
                                           $238,898         12.66%         $248,678        13.10%  
                                            =======         =====           =======        =====   
Core Capital............................   $267,198         14.16%         $277,161        14.60%  
Core Capital Requirement(4).............     56,599          3.00            56,966         3.00  
                                            -------         -----           -------        -----  
                                           $210,599         11.16%         $220,195        11.60%  
                                            =======         =====           =======        =====   
Total Risk-Based Capital(5)(6)..........   $279,445         42.33%         $289,408        43.67%  
Risk-Based Capital Requirement..........     52,818          8.00            53,014         8.00  
Excess..................................    -------         -----           -------        -----  
                                           $226,627         34.33%         $236,394        35.67%  
                                            =======         =====           =======        =====   
Reconciliation of capital infused into                                                          
     Kearny Federal Savings Bank:                                                               
Net proceeds infused....................                                                        
Less:                                       $93,355                     $107,455                
   Common stock acquired by                                                                     
      employee stock ownership plan.....                                                        
   Common stock acquired by                  15,180                       17,457                
      restricted stock plan.............                                                        
                                             12,397                       14,257                
Pro forma increase in GAAP and               ------                       ------                
   regulatory capital...................    $65,778                      $75,741                
                                             ======                       ======                


                                                                            31


















---------------
(1)  As adjusted  to give  effect to an increase in the number of shares  issued
     which could occur due to an increase in the offering  range of up to 15% as
     a result of  regulatory  considerations  or  changes  in market or  general
     financial  and  economic  conditions  following  the  commencement  of  the
     offerings.
(2)  Tangible  and  core  capital  levels  are  shown as a  percentage  of total
     adjusted assets.  The risk-based  capital level is shown as a percentage of
     risk-weighted   assets.  
(3)  Generally accepted  accounting  principles,  referred to as "GAAP," capital
     includes  goodwill,   intangible  assets  and  unrealized  gain  (loss)  on
     available-for-sale  securities,  net,  which are not included in regulatory
     capital.
(4)  The current  Office of Thrift  Supervision  core  capital  requirement  for
     savings banks is 3% of total  adjusted  assets for thrifts that receive the
     highest  supervisory  rating for safety and  soundness  and a 4% to 5% core
     capital  ratio  requirement  for  all  other  thrifts.   See  Regulation  -
     Regulation of Kearny Federal Savings Bank - Regulatory Capital Requirements
     on page 94. 
(5)  Assumes   net   proceeds   are   invested   in  assets  that  carry  a  20%
     risk-weighting.  (6) The  difference  between core  capital and  risk-based
     capital is attributable to the addition of accumulated other  comprehensive
     income of $7.0 million and the  addition of general  loan loss  reserves of
     $5.3 million.

                                       32



                      MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
                OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

         This  discussion  and  analysis   reflects  Kearny  Financial   Corp.'s
consolidated  financial  statements and other relevant  statistical  data and is
intended to enhance your understanding of our financial condition and results of
operations.  You should read the information in this section in conjunction with
Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  consolidated  financial  statements and accompanying
notes thereto beginning on page F-1 of this document,  and the other statistical
data provided in this  prospectus.  Unless  otherwise  indicated,  the financial
information  presented  in this  section  reflects  the  consolidated  financial
condition and results of operations of Kearny Financial Corp. and its direct and
indirect subsidiaries.

Overview

         Financial Condition and Results of Operations. Kearny Financial Corp.'s
results of operations depend primarily on its net interest income.  Net interest
income  is  the  difference   between  the  interest   income  we  earn  on  our
interest-earning  assets  and  the  interest  we  pay  on  our  interest-bearing
liabilities.  It is a function of the average  balances of loans and investments
versus deposits and borrowed funds  outstanding in any one period and the yields
earned  on those  loans  and  investments  and the cost of  those  deposits  and
borrowed funds.

         Our  interest-earning   assets  consist  primarily  of  mortgage-backed
securities and investment securities,  which comprised 64.5% of our total assets
at June 30, 2004 while our loan portfolio  comprised  26.1% of our total assets.
This was a change  from 50.4% and 25.5%,  respectively,  at June 30,  2003.  The
largest change in our interest-earning assets between June 30, 2003 and June 30,
2004 was a $286.2 million,  or 87.9%,  decrease in cash and cash equivalents and
corresponding  increases in the investment  securities  held to maturity and the
mortgage-backed  securities  held to maturity  portfolios of $148.5  million and
$89.7  million,  respectively.  The shift  from cash and cash  equivalents  into
securities  was  the  result  of  management's  decision  to  move  assets  from
interest-bearing  deposits and securities  purchased under  agreements to resell
into higher yielding mortgage-backed and investment securities.

         Our  interest-bearing  liabilities consist primarily of retail deposits
and  borrowings  from the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York.  At June 30, 2004,
our total  deposits  were $1.54  billion,  compared to $1.61 billion at June 30,
2003, and our Federal Home Loan Bank of New York  borrowings  were $94.2 million
compared to $75.7 million a year earlier. The primary factor for the decrease in
deposits was the runoff of  certificates  of deposit due to lower interest rates
paid as well as a movement by customers to alternative investment  opportunities
in the marketplace.  Federal Home Loan Bank advances  increased in order to fund
the purchase of investment securities and mortgage-backed securities.

         Our net interest  income  decreased by 10.0%,  to $46.6 million for the
year ended June 30, 2004 from $51.8  million  for the year ended June 30,  2003.
The net interest rate spread increased slightly to 2.37% for the year ended June
30,  2004  from  2.36%  for  2003  as the  decreases  in  the  average  cost  of
interest-bearing  liabilities and the average yield on interest-earning  assets,
which resulted  primarily from lower market interest rates prevailing during the
period,  were nearly the same.  Total interest  income  decreased 18.5% due to a
4.6% decrease in average balance of interest-earning assets and a 75 basis point
decrease in the average yield thereof,  while total interest  expense  decreased
28.2%,  primarily as a result of the 76 basis point decrease in the average cost
of interest-bearing liabilities.

         Our results of operations also depend on our provision for loan losses,
non-interest  income and  non-interest  expense.  Non-interest  income  includes
service fees and charges, including income generated

                                       33



by Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's ATM  network,  and income on bank owned life
insurance.   Non-interest  expense  includes  salaries  and  employee  benefits,
occupancy expenses and other general and administrative  expenses.  Non-interest
expense  decreased  significantly  for 2004 compared to 2003, from $44.4 million
for 2003 to $29.5  million for 2004,  primarily  as a result of a $14.3  million
decrease in merger  related  expenses in  connection  with our  acquisitions  of
Pulaski Savings Bank and West Essex Bank. These expenses consisted mainly of the
payout of employment contracts,  unexercised stock options, supplemental benefit
plans and incentive stock awards.

         Net  income  for the year ended  June 30,  2004 was $12.9  million,  an
increase of $8.8 million, or 218.1%, from $4.1 million for 2003. The increase in
net income  resulted  primarily  from the 33.6%,  or $14.9  million  decrease in
non-interest   expense,   which  as  discussed   above  was   primarily  due  to
significantly  lower  merger  related  expenses  recorded in 2004 as compared to
2003,  partially offset by the 10.0%, or $5.2 million,  decrease in net interest
income,  which as discussed  above is attributable in part to the 4.6%, or $87.3
million, decrease in average balance of interest-earning assets.

         During the three months ended  September 30, 2004,  net income was $3.8
million, as compared to $2.2 million during the three months ended September 30,
2003. The increase resulted primarily from an increase in net interest income as
the interest  rate spread and net interest  margin for the three month period in
2004 improved by 59 basis points and 57 basis points, respectively,  as compared
to the same period in 2003.

         Our total assets decreased by $32.3 million,  or 1.7%, to $1.90 billion
at September  30, 2004 from $1.94  billion at June 30, 2004,  primarily due to a
$26.7 million net outflow of deposits and $10.1 million decrease in Federal Home
Loan Bank advances. The primary cause of the decrease in deposits was the runoff
of  certificates  of  deposit  due to  lower  interest  rates  paid as well as a
movement  by  customers  to   alternative   investment   opportunities   in  the
marketplace.  A $46.5 million decrease in mortgage-backed securities as a result
of monthly principal  payments was partially offset by increases of $9.4 million
in loans receivable,  net and $9.9 million in investment securities. We used the
cash flow from the principal payments on mortgage-backed  securities to fund the
aforementioned  deposit  outflow,  reduce Federal Home Loan Bank advances,  fund
loans receivable and purchase investment securities.

         Stockholders' equity increased $4.3 million, or 1.5%, to $297.8 million
at  September  30,  2004,  from $293.5  million at June 30,  2004.  The increase
primarily  reflects  net  income  of $3.8  million  for the three  months  ended
September 30, 2004,  along with an increase in accumulated  other  comprehensive
income  of  $501,000  resulting  from  an  increase  in the  unrealized  gain on
available for sale securities.

         Recent  Acquisitions.  During  recent  years,  we have  implemented  an
expansion  strategy  fueled  primarily  by  acquisitions,  and have  experienced
significant  growth with total assets  growing  from $793.2  million at June 30,
1998 to $1.90  billion at  September  30, 2004,  securities  growing from $596.9
million  at June  30,  1998 to  $1.21  billion  at  September  30,  2004,  loans
receivable,  net growing from $152.1  million at June 30, 1998 to $515.2 million
at September 30, 2004 and total deposits growing from $608.9 million at June 30,
1998 to $1.51  billion at  September  30, 2004.  At June 30,  1998,  we had five
branch  offices and 75  employees,  and at  September  30, 2004 we had 25 branch
offices and 273 employees.

         We completed  our first whole bank  acquisition  in March 1999 with the
acquisition  of 1st Bergen  Bancorp and the merger of South Bergen  Savings Bank
into Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank,  adding  $274.3  million in assets and four
branch  offices,  giving  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank a total of nine  branch
offices  following  completion of this merger. In October 2002, Kearny Financial
Corp.  acquired Pulaski Bancorp,  Inc., and Pulaski Savings Bank was merged into
Kearny Federal Savings Bank. This transaction added

                                       34



$286.7 million in assets and seven branch  offices.  Additionally,  we completed
one deposit  assumption  in 1999 and opened a de novo branch in 2002.  Our third
whole bank acquisition was completed in July 2003 with Kearny Financial  Corp.'s
acquisition of West Essex  Bancorp,  Inc. and the merger of West Essex Bank into
Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank,  adding $369.3 million in assets and eight branch
offices, bringing Kearny Federal Savings Bank's total offices to twenty-five.

         The acquisitions of Pulaski Bancorp,  Inc. and West Essex Bancorp, Inc.
involved   institutions  that  were  in  the  mutual  holding  company  form  of
organization,  with the  minority of stock held by public  stockholders  and the
majority  of stock  held by the mutual  holding  company.  Accordingly,  (i) the
merger of the mutual holding companies utilized the pooling-of-interests  method
accounting,  (ii)  the  acquisition  of the  mid-tier  stock  holding  company's
minority  shareholder   interests  was  accounted  for  as  the  acquisition  of
non-controlling minority interests, and (iii) the merger of the mid-tier holding
companies was accounted for as a combination of entities  under common  control.
Under  pooling-of-interests  accounting,  the recorded assets and liabilities of
each of West Essex and Pulaski were carried forward to the combined  corporation
at their recorded amounts; income of the combined corporation includes income of
each of West  Essex  and  Pulaski  for  the  entire  fiscal  year in  which  the
respective   acquisitions   occurred.   The  reported  income  of  the  separate
corporations  for prior  periods  were  combined  and  restated as income of the
combined  corporation.  Expenses  incurred in connection  with the  acquisitions
constituted expenses for the accounting periods subsequent to the closing of the
acquisitions. The amounts paid to minority shareholders of Pulaski Bancorp, Inc.
and West Essex Bancorp, Inc. in excess of their interests in such companies were
recorded as goodwill. For additional information, see Note 2 to the consolidated
financial statements.

         We intend to continue to grow. In addition to building our core banking
business  through  internal  growth,  we will also actively  consider  expansion
opportunities   such  as  the   acquisition  of  branches  and  other  financial
institutions. We do not, however, have any current understandings, agreements or
arrangements for expansion by the acquisition of any branches or other financial
institutions.  Furthermore,  there can be no assurance  that we will continue to
experience  such  rapid  growth,  or any  growth,  in the  future.  We may  have
difficulty  finding  suitable  sites for de novo  branches and  identifying  and
successfully acquiring branches or other financial institutions.

         Business Strategy. Our current business strategy is to seek to grow and
improve our profitability by:

          o    increasing  the volume of our loan  originations  and the size of
               our loan portfolio relative to our securities portfolio;

          o    increasing the  origination of  multi-family  and commercial real
               estate loans, construction loans and commercial business loans;

          o    building our core banking business through internal growth and de
               novo  branching,   as  well  as  actively  considering  expansion
               opportunities  such as the  acquisition  of  branches  and  other
               financial institutions;

          o    developing a sales culture by training and encouraging our branch
               personnel  to promote our  existing  products and services to our
               customers; and

          o    maintaining high asset quality.

                                       35



         Our deposits have traditionally exceeded our loan originations,  and we
have  invested  these  deposits  primarily  in  mortgage-backed  securities  and
investment securities. Following our acquisition of South Bergen Savings Bank in
1999, we began focusing on growing the size of our loan portfolio. Prior to that
time,  our  operations  were  more  focused  on  obtaining   deposits  from  the
communities  in which we operated  our five branch  offices in Bergen and Hudson
counties and investing those funds in  mortgage-backed  and other securities.  A
primary focus of our current business strategy will be to increase our volume of
loan originations and the size of our loan portfolio. There can be no assurance,
however, that we will be successful in this effort.

         In an effort to develop our commercial business, we have recently added
four experienced business development officers who will focus on commercial loan
originations,  and we will  soon  offer  internet  banking  and cash  management
services to our commercial  customers.  Our residential loan  originations  have
traditionally been largely  advertising driven, but we plan to add regional loan
originators throughout our branch network who will seek to build our residential
loan portfolio.

Critical Accounting Policies

         Our  accounting  policies  are  integral to  understanding  the results
reported  and are  described in detail in Note 1 to the  consolidated  financial
statements beginning on page F-1 of this document. In preparing the consolidated
financial  statements,  management is required to make estimates and assumptions
that affect the reported  amounts of assets and  liabilities  as of the dates of
the consolidated statements of financial condition and revenues and expenses for
the periods then ended.  Actual  results could differ  significantly  from those
estimates.  Material estimates that are particularly  susceptible to significant
changes  relate to the  determination  of the  allowance  for loan  losses,  the
assessment of prepayment risks associated with mortgage-backed  securities,  the
evaluation of securities impairment and the impairment testing of goodwill.

         Allowance for Loan Losses. The allowance for loan losses represents our
best estimate of losses known and inherent in our loan  portfolio  that are both
probable and reasonable to estimate.  In determining the amount of the allowance
for loan  losses,  we consider  the losses  inherent in our loan  portfolio  and
changes  in the nature and  volume of our loan  activities,  along with  general
economic and real estate  market  conditions.  We use a two tier  approach:  (1)
identification  of impaired loans and  establishment of specific loss allowances
on such loans;  and (2)  establishment  of general  valuation  allowances on the
remainder of our loan  portfolio.  We maintain a loan review system which allows
for a periodic  review of our loan  portfolio  and the early  identification  of
potential  impaired  loans.  Our system  takes into  consideration,  among other
things,  delinquency  status,  size of loans,  type of collateral  and financial
condition of the borrowers.  Specific loan loss  allowances are  established for
identified loans based on a review of such information  and/or appraisals of the
underlying collateral. General loan loss allowances are based upon a combination
of  factors  including,  but  not  limited  to,  actual  loan  loss  experience,
composition of the loan portfolio,  current economic conditions and management's
judgment.

         Although  specific and general loan loss  allowances are established in
accordance  with  management's  best estimate,  actual losses are dependent upon
future events and, as such,  further provisions for loan losses may be necessary
in order to increase the level of the  allowance  for loan losses.  For example,
our  evaluation  of the allowance  includes  consideration  of current  economic
conditions,  and a change in economic conditions could reduce the ability of our
borrowers  to make  timely  repayments  of their  loans.  This  could  result in
increased  delinquencies and increased  non-performing loans, and thus a need to
make  increased  provisions to the  allowance for loan losses,  which would be a
charge to income  during  the  period  the  provision  is made,  resulting  in a
reduction to our earnings. A change in economic

                                       36



conditions   could  also   adversely   affect   the  value  of  the   properties
collateralizing  our real  estate  loans,  resulting  in  increased  charge-offs
against the allowance and reduced recoveries,  and thus a need to make increased
provisions  to the  allowance  for loan  losses.  Furthermore,  a change  in the
composition of our loan  portfolio or growth of our loan portfolio  could result
in the need for additional provisions.

         Historically,  we believe our estimates and  assumptions  in evaluating
the  allowance  for loan  losses and  setting  the  provision  have been  fairly
accurate.  The  decrease  in the  ratio  of the  allowance  for loan  losses  to
non-performing  loans to 213.65% at September  30, 2004 from 220.96% at June 30,
2004 is a result of a $148,000 increase in non-performing loans. The increase in
the ratio of the allowance for loan losses to non-performing loans to 220.96% at
June 30, 2004 from  177.64% at June 30, 2003 is a result of a $588,000  decrease
in non-performing loans.

         Prepayment  Risks  Associated  with  Mortgage-backed   Securities.   At
September  30,  2004,  June  30,  2004  and  June  30,  2003,  net  premiums  of
approximately $3.3 million,  $3.6 million and $3.7 million,  respectively,  were
included in the carrying amounts of our mortgage-backed  securities. We amortize
the  premium  included  in the  carrying  amount  over the  average  life of the
security. The mortgage-backed securities we hold in our portfolio are subject to
prepayment  risk because  changes in interest rates can affect the expected life
of these mortgage-backed securities. This means the level of prepayments must be
estimated in order to estimate the average life of mortgage-backed securities.

         We evaluate the estimated average life of mortgage-backed securities on
a monthly basis and adjust the  amortization  speed to reflect any change in the
average life.  Amortizing the premium faster results in a reduction of the yield
on the  securities,  whereas  slowing the  amortization  increases the yield.  A
reduction  in  the  yield  decreases  our  interest  income  on  mortgage-backed
securities,  while an increase in the yield  increases  our  interest  income on
mortgage-backed securities.

         The  assessment  of the  prepayment  risks  related to  mortgage-backed
securities is highly  dependent upon the prediction of trends in market interest
rates. A reduction in interest rates generally results in increased  prepayments
of  mortgage-backed  securities,  as borrowers  refinance their debt in order to
reduce their  borrowing  cost.  Correspondingly,  an increase in interest  rates
should result in decreased  prepayments and fewer refinancings.  Because changes
in interest  rates can affect the average  life of  mortgage-backed  securities,
this makes the  estimation of the  prepayment  risk  difficult.  We address this
difficulty  by adjusting the  amortization  speed monthly to reflect the current
average life.

         Impairment  Testing of Goodwill.  Goodwill,  representing the excess of
amounts paid over the fair value of net assets of the  institutions  acquired in
purchase transactions, is recorded at its fair value at the date of acquisition.
Through June 30, 2002, we amortized goodwill using the straight line method over
15 years.  Effective July 1, 2002, we adopted the Financial Accounting Standards
Board's Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 141, "Business
Combinations," and SFAS No. 142,  "Goodwill and Other Intangible  Assets," under
which we no longer  amortize  goodwill,  but test it  annually  for  impairment.
Impairment  exists when the carrying value of goodwill  exceeds its implied fair
value.  We would also test goodwill for  impairment  between  annual tests if an
event occurs or circumstances  change that would more likely than not reduce the
fair value of a reporting unit below its carrying amount.

         At  September  30, 2004,  June 30, 2004 and June 30, 2003,  we reported
goodwill of $82.3 million,  $82.3 million and $31.7 million,  respectively.  The
increase from 2003 to 2004 resulted from our  acquisition  of West Essex Bank in
which $50.5  million,  the amount paid to  minority  stockholders  of West Essex
Bancorp,  Inc.  in excess of their  interest  in the fair value of net assets of
West Essex Bancorp, Inc., was recorded as goodwill.

                                       37



         We have tested our goodwill and concluded  that no  impairment  charges
were  required to be  recorded  in the years  ended June 30,  2004 and 2003.  No
impairment test has been conducted since the test as of June 30, 2004,  however,
as of September 30, 2004,  we were not aware of any factors that would  indicate
an  impairment.  Although  the value of the goodwill  was  determined  not to be
impaired at the date of the testing, the value of the goodwill can change in the
future.  The value of the goodwill  would be expected to decrease if there was a
significant  decrease in the franchise  value of Kearny Federal Savings Bank. If
an impairment loss is determined in the future, the loss will be reflected as an
expense for the period in which the impairment was determined,  meaning that our
net income  for that  period  would be  reduced by the amount of the  impairment
loss.  Since beginning  testing for impairment  under SFAS 142 effective July 1,
2002, we have not had any impairment  loss,  thus we believe that  historically,
our estimates and  assumptions in evaluating the value of the goodwill have been
accurate.

         Other-than-Temporary Impairment of Securities. We evaluate on a monthly
basis whether any securities are other-than-temporarily impaired. In making this
determination, we consider the extent and duration of the impairment, the nature
and financial  health of the issuer,  our ability and intent to hold  securities
for a period of time sufficient to allow for any anticipated  recovery in market
value and other factors relevant to specific securities, such as the credit risk
of the issuer and whether a guarantee or insurance applies to the security. This
evaluation  method has not changed  during the three fiscal years ended June 30,
2004 or the three  month  period  ended  September  30,  2004.  If a security is
determined to be other-than-temporarily  impaired, an impairment loss is charged
to income during the period the impairment loss is found to exist,  resulting in
a reduction to our earnings for that period.

         As of  September  30, 2004 and June 30,  2004,  we  concluded  that any
unrealized  losses  in  the  securities  available  for  sale,   mortgage-backed
securities  held  to  maturity  and  investment   securities  held  to  maturity
portfolios  were  temporary  in nature  because they were  primarily  related to
market  interest rates and not related to the  underlying  credit quality of the
issuers of the securities.  Additionally, we have the intent and ability to hold
these  investments for the time necessary to recover the amortized cost.  Future
events that would  materially  change this  conclusion and require an impairment
loss to be charged to operations  include a change in the credit  quality of the
issuers.  We  believe  that  historically,  our  estimates  and  assumptions  in
evaluating whether any securities are other-than-temporarily  impaired have been
accurate.

         Effective June 30, 2004, we adopted Emerging Issues Task Force ("EITF")
Issuance  No.  03-1,  "The Meaning of Other than  Temporary  Impairment  and Its
Application to Certain Investments," which requires quantitative and qualitative
disclosures  for  investment  securities  that are impaired at the balance sheet
date, but for which  other-than-temporary  impairment  has not been  recognized.
Under EITF 03-1,  individual  securities are considered impaired when fair value
is less than amortized cost. Adoption of EITF 03-01 has not changed our policies
for determining whether any securities are other-than-temporarily impaired.

Comparison of Financial Condition at September 30, 2004 and June 30, 2004

         Our total assets decreased by $32.3 million,  or 1.7%, to $1.90 billion
at September  30, 2004 from $1.94  billion at June 30, 2004,  primarily due to a
$26.7 million net outflow of deposits and $10.1 million decrease in Federal Home
Loan Bank advances.  Mortgage-backed securities held to maturity decreased $46.5
million, partially offset by growth of $9.4 million in loans receivable, net and
$9.9 million in investment securities held to maturity.

                                       38



         Mortgage-backed  securities decreased $46.5 million, or 6.0%, to $724.9
million at September 30, 2004,  from $771.4 million at June 30, 2004 as a result
of monthly principal payments. We used this cash flow to fund the aforementioned
deposit outflow,  reduce Federal Home Loan Bank advances,  fund loans receivable
and purchase investment securities held to maturity.

         Loans  receivable,  net of  deferred  fees and the  allowance  for loan
losses,  increased  $9.4 million,  or 1.9%,  to $515.2  million at September 30,
2004,  from $505.8  million at June 30,  2004.  The increase  came  primarily in
one-to-four  family mortgage loans,  partially offset by decreases in commercial
business loans and construction loans.

         Investment securities held to maturity increased $9.9 million, or 2.3%,
to $445.8  million at September 30, 2004,  from $435.9 million at June 30, 2004.
The  increase  came  exclusively  in the  tax-exempt  category  as we  purchased
municipal securities during the three-month period.

         Deposits,  which decreased $26.7 million,  or 1.7%, to $1.51 billion at
September  30,  2004,  from  $1.54  billion  at June  30,  2004  were  the  most
significant cause of the decrease in total  liabilities.  The primary factor for
this decrease was the runoff of  certificates  of deposit due to lower  interest
rates  paid  as  well as a  movement  by  customers  to  alternative  investment
opportunities in the marketplace.

         Federal Home Loan Bank advances  decreased $10.1 million,  or 10.7%, to
$84.1  million  at  September  30,  2004,  from $94.2  million at June 30,  2004
primarily  resulting  from an advance  that matured in July of 2004 that was not
renewed.

         Stockholders' equity increased $4.3 million, or 1.5%, to $297.8 million
at  September  30,  2004,  from $293.5  million at June 30,  2004.  The increase
primarily  reflects  net  income  of $3.8  million  for the three  months  ended
September 30, 2004,  along with an increase in accumulated  other  comprehensive
income  of  $501,000  resulting  from  an  increase  in the  unrealized  gain on
available for sale securities.

Comparison  of Operating  Results for the Three Months Ended  September 30, 2004
and 2003

         General.  Net income for the three months ended  September 30, 2004 was
$3.8 million,  an increase of $1.6 million,  or 72.7%, from $2.2 million for the
three  months ended  September  30,  2003.  The increase in net income  resulted
primarily from an increase in net interest income.

         Net Interest Income. Net interest income increased by $2.3 million,  or
21.9%, to $12.8 million for the three months ended September 30, 2004 from $10.5
million for the three months ended  September  30, 2003.  The net interest  rate
spread  increased to 2.65% for the three months  ended  September  30, 2004 from
2.06% for the three months ended  September  30, 2003.  The net interest  margin
increased 57 basis points to 2.87% for the three months ended September 30, 2004
compared with 2.30% for the three months ended September 30, 2003.

         The net interest rate spread primarily improved due to a 43 basis point
decrease in the cost of average  interest-bearing  liabilities  to 1.82% for the
three months ending  September 30, 2004,  from 2.25% for the three months ending
September 30, 2003. The net interest rate spread also improved due to a 16 basis
point increase in the yield on average  interest-earning assets to 4.47% for the
three months ending  September 30, 2004,  from 4.31% for the three months ending
September 30, 2003.

                                       39



         The increase in the net interest  margin is largely  reflective  of the
increase   in  the  ratio  of   average   interest-earning   assets  to  average
interest-bearing liabilities to 114.31% for the three months ended September 30,
2004, from 112.13% for the three months ended September 30, 2003.

         Interest Income. Total interest income increased $251,000,  or 1.3%, to
$19.9 million for the three months ended  September 30, 2004, from $19.7 million
for the three months ended September 30, 2003. Average  interest-earning  assets
decreased  $41.9  million,  or 2.3%, to $1.78 billion for the three months ended
September 30, 2004,  from $1.82 billion for the three months ended September 30,
2003.  However,  the aforementioned 16 basis points increase in yield offset the
decline in average  interest-earning assets, leading to the increase in interest
income.   We  attribute  the  increase  in  interest  income  primarily  to  the
reinvestment of cash and cash  equivalents in higher yielding loans  receivable,
investment  securities held to maturity and  mortgage-backed  securities held to
maturity.

         Interest income on loans  receivable  decreased  $527,000,  or 6.9%, to
$7.1 million for the three months ended  September  30, 2004,  from $7.7 million
for the three months ended  September  30,  2003.  The average  balance of loans
receivable  increased  $12.5  million,  or 2.5%, to $510.7 million for the three
months ended  September 30, 2004, from $498.2 million for the three months ended
September 30, 2003. However, a decrease in the average yield on loans receivable
to 5.59% for the three months ended September 30, 2004, from 6.15% for the three
months ended  September 30, 2003,  offset the increase in the average balance of
loans outstanding.  An increased marketing effort contributed to the increase in
average loans  receivable.  The lower yield  reflects  generally  lower interest
rates on  originations  and downward rate  adjustments  on  adjustable  rate and
floating rate loans.

         Interest  income on investment  securities,  including both taxable and
tax-exempt issues,  increased $783,000,  or 24.3%, to $4.0 million for the three
months  ended  September  30, 2004 from $3.2  million for the three months ended
September 30, 2003. The increase resulted from an increase of $103.5 million, or
27.3%, in the average balance of investment securities to $482.0 million for the
three months ended  September 30, 2004 from $378.5  million for the three months
ended September 30, 2003. However, a decrease in the average yield on investment
securities to 3.33% for the three months ended  September  30, 2004,  from 3.41%
for the three months ended September 30, 2003,  partially offset the increase in
the average  balance of investment  securities.  The increased  average  balance
reflects the reinvestment of cash flows from mortgage-backed  securities held to
maturity as well as the  redeployment  of cash and cash  equivalents.  The lower
yield resulted from  principal  repayments on older higher  yielding  securities
while new purchases occurred in a lower interest rate environment.

         Interest  income  on   mortgage-backed   securities  held  to  maturity
increased  $673,000,  or  8.4%,  to $8.6  million  for the  three  months  ended
September  30, 2004 from $8.0 million for the three months ended  September  30,
2003.  This was a result of a $95.3 million,  or 14.4%,  increase in the average
balance of mortgage-backed securities held to maturity to $755.0 million for the
three months ended  September 30, 2004 from $659.7  million for the three months
ended  September 30, 2003. The increase in the average  balance more than offset
the decrease in the average yield to 4.58% for the three months ended  September
30, 2004 from 4.84% for the three months ended  September 30, 2003. The increase
in the average balance of  mortgage-backed  securities held to maturity resulted
from the  redeployment  of cash  and cash  equivalents.  The  decrease  in yield
resulted from principal  repayments received on older higher yielding securities
while new purchases occurred in a lower interest rate environment.

         Interest income on other interest-earning assets decreased $678,000, or
85.5%,  to $115,000 for the three months ended  September 30, 2004 from $793,000
for the three months  ended  September  30, 2003.  This was a result of a $200.0
million, or 100%, decrease in the average balance of securities

                                       40



purchased under agreements to resell and a $53.3 million, or 60.7%,  decrease in
the average  balance of other  interest-earning  assets to $34.6 million for the
three months ended  September  30, 2004 from $87.9  million for the three months
ended  September  30, 2003.  There was a 21 basis point  increase in the average
yield on other  interest-earning  assets  to 1.33% for the  three  months  ended
September  30, 2004,  from 1.12% for the three months ended  September 30, 2003.
The substantial decrease in the average balances was due to the use of assets in
these  categories  to invest in higher  yielding  securities.  We attribute  the
improvement  in yield to the  dividend  paid on  Federal  Home Loan  Bank  stock
relative to short term market interest rates.

         Interest  Expense.  Total interest expense  decreased $2.1 million,  or
22.4%,  to $7.1 million for the three months ended  September 30, 2004 from $9.2
million for the three months ended  September  30, 2003.  The decrease  resulted
primarily from a decrease in the average cost of interest-bearing liabilities to
1.82% for the three  months  ended  September  30, 2004 from 2.25% for the three
months  ended  September  30,  2003.  The  average  balance of  interest-bearing
liabilities  declined to $1.56 billion for the three months ended  September 30,
2004 as compared to $1.63 billion for the three months ended September 30, 2003.
Average cost decreased due to lower market interest rates prevailing  during the
period.

         Interest expense on deposits decreased $2.0 million,  or 24.7%, to $6.1
million for the three months ended  September 30, 2004 from $8.1 million for the
three months ended  September 30, 2003.  Interest  expense on deposits  declined
primarily due to a decrease in the average cost of interest-bearing  deposits to
1.66% for the three  months  ended  September  30, 2004 from 2.09% for the three
months ended September 30, 2003 and a decrease in deposits.  The average cost of
certificates  of deposit  declined  to 2.11% from  2.49%,  the  average  cost of
savings and club  accounts  declined to 1.03% from 1.54% and the average cost of
interest-bearing  demand  accounts  increased  from 0.71% to 0.72%.  The average
balance of interest-bearing  deposits decreased $78.4 million, or 5.1%, to $1.47
billion for the three months ended September 30, 2004 from $1.55 billion for the
three months ended September 30, 2003. Average  certificates of deposit declined
to $884.7  million  from  $984.7  million,  average  savings  and club  accounts
increased  to $481.7  million from $458.6  million and average  interest-bearing
demand accounts decreased to $106.6 million from $108.0 million. We believe this
shift in  deposit  composition  reflects a movement  to  alternative  investment
opportunities in the marketplace as well as a shift to liquidity, while awaiting
possible  future  interest  rate  increases.  We expect  this  shift in  deposit
composition  may continue to the extent that interest  rates  continue to remain
low. In our current  estimation,  we do not expect  that the  potential  deposit
run-off,   as  a  result  of  depositors   moving  to   alternative   investment
opportunities  and  shifting  their assets into more liquid  deposit  categories
while awaiting  possible future  interest rate  increases,  will have a material
effect on our liquidity.

         Interest expense on Federal Home Loan Bank advances  decreased $75,000,
or 7.0%,  to $991,000 for the three months  ended  September  30, 2004 from $1.1
million for the three  months ended  September  30,  2003.  The average  balance
increased  $10.7 million,  or 14.1%, to $86.1 million for the three months ended
September 30, 2004 from $75.4  million for the three months ended  September 30,
2003.  However,  a decrease  in the average  cost to 4.60% for the three  months
ended  September  30, 2004 from 5.65% for the three months ended  September  30,
2003 offset the  increase in the average  balance.  The  increase in the average
balance  resulted from additional  borrowings,  but at a lower cost due to their
relatively  short remaining term to maturity,  in a continuing low interest rate
environment.

         Provision for Loan Losses. We charge to operations  provisions for loan
losses at a level  required to reflect  credit losses in the loan portfolio that
are both probable and reasonable to estimate.  Management,  in  determining  the
allowance for loan losses, considers the losses inherent in the loan

                                       41



portfolio  and  changes in the nature and volume of our loan  activities,  along
with general economic and real estate market  conditions.  We utilize a two-tier
approach:  (1)  identification  of impaired loans and  establishment of specific
loss  allowances  on such  loans;  and (2)  establishment  of general  valuation
allowances on the remainder of our loan portfolio.  We establish a specific loan
loss allowance for an impaired loan based on delinquency  status,  size of loan,
type of collateral  and/or appraisal of the underlying  collateral and financial
condition  of  the  borrower.  We  base  general  loan  loss  allowances  upon a
combination  of  factors  including,  but  not  limited  to,  actual  loan  loss
experience,  composition of the loan portfolio,  current economic conditions and
management's judgment.

         There was a $151,000  provision  for loan  losses made during the three
months ended  September  30, 2004.  Total loans  increased to $519.7  million at
September 30, 2004 from $510.2  million at June 30, 2004.  Non-performing  loans
were $2.5 million,  or 0.48%,  of total loans at September 30, 2004, as compared
to $2.3 million,  or 0.46%,  of total loans at June 30, 2004.  The allowance for
loan losses as a percentage  of gross loans  outstanding  was 1.02% at September
30, 2004 and 1.01% at June 30,  2004,  reflecting  balances of $5.3  million and
$5.1 million, respectively.

         Management  assesses  the  allowance  for loan  losses  monthly.  While
management uses available  information to recognize losses on loans,  additional
loan loss provisions may be necessary in the future based on changes in economic
conditions.  In  addition,  regulatory  agencies,  as an integral  part of their
examination  process,  periodically review the allowance for loan losses and may
require  us to  recognize  additional  provisions  based  on their  judgment  of
information  available to them at the time of their  examination.  We maintained
the  allowance  for  loan  losses  as of  September  30,  2004 at a  level  that
represented  management's  best estimate of losses in the loan  portfolio to the
extent they were both probable and reasonably estimable.

         Non-Interest  Income.  Non-interest income increased $56,000, or 12.8%,
to $494,000 for the three months ended  September  30, 2004 compared to $438,000
for the three months ended  September  30, 2003.  The increase was primarily the
result of a gain from the sale of a trust  preferred  security  during the three
months  ended  September  30,  2004,  offset by a reduction  in fees and service
charge income due to the lower average  balance of deposits for the three months
ended September 30, 2004 as compared to the 2003 period.

         At September 30, 2004,  we had a $3.9 million  investment in bank owned
life  insurance.  The returns on the  investment of the cash value of the policy
generate non-interest income. We acquired this investment in connection with our
acquisition of West Essex Bank in 2003; it covers the former president and chief
executive officer and former chief lending officer of West Essex Bank.

         During the three months  ending  September  30, 2004,  we  recognized a
$71,000 gain,  included in non-interest  income,  from the sale of a security in
our available for sale  portfolio.  There was no such gain recorded in the three
months ending September 30, 2003.

         Non-Interest Expense.  Excluding merger related expenses,  non-interest
expense increased $638,000,  or 8.9%, to $7.8 million for the three months ended
September 30, 2004,  from $7.2 million for the three months ended  September 30,
2003. The increase  consisted  primarily of a $458,000  increase in salaries and
employee benefits.

         The merger  related  expenses  of  $592,000  recorded  during the three
months ended  September 30, 2003,  consisted  primarily of fees due to attorneys
and financial advisors.

                                       42



         Salaries and employee benefits  increased  $458,000,  or 10.9%, to $4.7
million for the three months ended September 30, 2004,  compared to $4.2 million
for the three months ended  September  30, 2003.  The increase was the result of
normal salary increases, increased benefit costs and hiring of additional staff,
including four business  development  officers.  We anticipate  higher  benefits
costs  during  the  remainder  of  fiscal  2005,  as  we  expect  to  contribute
significantly  more  to  fund  the  employee  pension  plan.  The  pension  plan
contribution expense for the three months ended September 30, 2004 was $322,000,
as compared to $236,000  for the three  months ended  September  30,  2003.  Our
revised  estimate  based  on  current  information  is  that  the  pension  plan
contribution   expense  for  the  quarter  ending  December  31,  2004  will  be
approximately  $947,000,  and $635,000 per quarter for the quarters ending March
31,  2005  and  June 30,  2005.  The  increase  is due to  lower  than  expected
investment  returns on plan assets and higher required  contributions  resulting
from the incremental effect of normal salary increases.

         All other elements of non-interest expense totaled $3.1 million for the
three months ended  September 30, 2004; an increase of $180,000,  or 6.1%,  from
the $3.0  million  total for the three  months ended  September  30, 2003.  This
increase primarily reflects normal increases in the cost of office occupancy and
equipment.

         Management  expects  increased  expenses  in the future  because of the
establishment  of the employee  stock  ownership  plan and the  potential  stock
benefit plans, as well as increased costs associated with being a public company
such as periodic reporting,  annual meetings,  retention of a transfer agent and
professional fees.

         Furthermore,  non-interest expense for the three months ended September
30,  2004  does  not   reflect  the  impact  of  our  new  53,000   square  feet
administrative building in Fairfield,  New Jersey. We estimate the total cost of
this  building  will  be  $13.5  million,  including  furniture,   fixtures  and
equipment; capitalizing the cost of the building, net of land, with amortization
taking place over forty years.  Additionally,  we estimate the annual  operating
expense of this new  building,  excluding  depreciation,  will be  approximately
$450,000.  We expect to open a de novo branch office in Lacey, New Jersey in the
first quarter of 2005, with a total cost of approximately  $2.3 million.  During
2005, we also plan to replace three office  locations with new buildings,  at an
estimated  cost of  approximately  $1.9  million  per  branch.  Furthermore,  in
December of 2004,  we acquired a 3.7 acre parcel of land in West  Caldwell,  New
Jersey for approximately $2.3 million. We intend to construct a branch office at
this  location and  subdivide and lease to third parties the portion of land not
used for the branch building.  Expenses related to the planned  expansion of our
operations  through de novo  branching and the  acquisition of branches or other
financial institutions could affect earnings in future periods.

         Provision  for Income Taxes.  The provision for income taxes  increased
$604,000,  or 63.0%,  to $1.6 million for the three months ended  September  30,
2004 from $958,000 for the three months ended  September 30, 2003. The effective
income tax rates were 29.2% for the three  months  ended  September  30, 2004 as
compared to 30.0% for the three months ended  September  30, 2003.  We attribute
the  increase  in income tax expense to an  increase  in pre-tax  income,  which
increased  $2.2  million,  or 67.8%,  to $5.4 million for the three months ended
September 30, 2004,  from $3.2 million for the three months ended  September 30,
2003.

Comparison of Financial Condition at June 30, 2004 and June 30, 2003

         Our total assets decreased by $60.0 million,  or 3.0%, to $1.94 billion
at June 30, 2004 from $2.0  billion at June 30, 2003,  primarily  due to a $76.2
million net outflow of deposits,  partially  offset by an $18.5 million increase
in Federal Home Loan Bank advances.

                                       43



         The  decrease  in total  assets  was most  pronounced  in cash and cash
equivalents,  which decreased $286.2 million, or 87.9%, to $39.5 million at June
30,  2004  from  $325.7  million  at June  30,  2003,  in order  to  offset  the
aforementioned   deposit  outflow  and  to  fund  increases  in  the  securities
portfolios.  The securities portfolios,  including both securities available for
sale and securities held to maturity,  increased  $242.0  million,  or 24.0%, to
$1.25 billion at June 30, 2004, from $1.01 billion at June 30, 2003.  Investment
securities  held to  maturity  increased  $148.6  million,  or 51.7%,  to $435.9
million at June 30, 2004, from $287.3 million at June 30, 2003.  Mortgage-backed
securities held to maturity increased $89.8 million, or 13.2%, to $771.4 million
at June 30,  2004,  from $681.6  million at June 30,  2003.  In both cases,  the
increases were the result of investing funds previously held in cash equivalents
in order to increase overall yield. We would not expect further  similarly large
investments of the funds currently held in cash  equivalents into the securities
portfolio since a sufficient amount of cash equivalents is necessary to maintain
sufficient liquidity.

         Loans  receivable  decreased  marginally to $505.8  million at June 30,
2004,  from $509.2  million at June 30, 2003.  One-to  -four family  residential
mortgage loans  decreased by $8.2 million to $358.2 million from $366.4 million,
as repayments exceeded originations and purchases during the year ended June 30,
2004.  Multi-family and commercial real estate mortgage loans increased by $12.3
million to $83.4 million, reflecting our strategy to build this part of our loan
portfolio.

         The West Essex Bancorp, Inc. merger was consummated on July 1, 2003. As
a result,  goodwill increased $50.6 million, or 159.6%, to $82.3 million at June
30, 2004,  from $31.7 million at June 30, 2003.  The $67.9  million  deposit for
acquisition of West Essex Bancorp,  Inc. at June 30, 2003 was paid to West Essex
stockholders.

         Premises and equipment  increased by $6.8 million,  or 34.0%,  to $26.6
million from $19.9 million.  This increase  resulted  mainly from a $5.9 million
increase in construction in progress in connection with the  construction of our
new 53,000  square feet  administrative  building in Fairfield,  New Jersey.  We
began moving management staff and  administrative  operations into parts of this
building in October 2004 and completed the move-in phase in December 2004.

         Total deposits decreased by $76.2 million, or 4.7%, to $1.54 billion at
June 30, 2004,  from $1.61 billion at June 30, 2003. The primary factor for this
decrease was the runoff of  certificates  of deposit due to lower interest rates
paid.

         Federal Home Loan Bank advances  increased $18.5 million,  or 24.4%, to
$94.2 million at June 30, 2004 from $75.7 million at June 30, 2003. The increase
in Federal Home Loan Bank  advances was used to fund the purchase of  investment
securities and mortgage-backed securities  held-to-maturity.  New advances drawn
were fixed rate borrowings with maturities of less than one year.

         Stockholders' equity decreased $2.2 million, or 0.7%, to $293.5 million
at June 30, 2004 from $295.7  million at June 30, 2003,  primarily  reflecting a
$17.3 million reduction related to the purchase, on July 1, 2003, of 100% of the
outstanding minority owned shares of West Essex Bancorp,  Inc., partially offset
by net income of $12.9 million for the twelve months ended June 30, 2004,  along
with an increase  in  accumulated  other  comprehensive  income of $2.3  million
reflecting an increase in the unrealized gain on available for sale securities.

                                       44



Comparison  of Operating  Results for the Years Ended June 30, 2004 and June 30,
2003

         General. Net income for the year ended June 30, 2004 was $12.9 million,
an increase of $8.8 million, or 218.1%, from $4.1 million for 2003. The increase
in net  income  resulted  primarily  from a  decrease  in  non-interest  expense
primarily due to significantly lower merger related expenses recorded in 2004 as
compared to 2003, partially offset by a decrease in net interest income.

         Net Interest Income. Net interest income decreased by $5.2 million,  or
10.0%,  to $46.6 million for the year ended June 30, 2004 from $51.8 million for
the year ended June 30, 2003. The net interest rate spread increased slightly to
2.37% for the year ended June 30,  2004 from  2.36% for 2003.  The net  interest
margin  decreased  16 basis  points to 2.59% for the year  ended  June 30,  2004
compared  with 2.75% for the year ended June 30,  2003.  The net  interest  rate
spread  changed  little  as  the  76  basis  point  reduction  in  the  cost  of
interest-bearing  liabilities  was closely matched by the 75 basis point decline
in the  average  yield  on  interest-earning  assets.  The  decrease  in the net
interest  margin  is  largely  reflective  of  the  decrease  in  the  ratio  of
interest-earning assets to interest-bearing  liabilities to 112.46% for the year
ended June 30, 2004, from 116.54% for the year ended June 30, 2003.

         Interest  Income.  Total interest income  decreased  $17.8 million,  or
18.5%, to $78.7 million for the year ended June 30, 2004, from $96.5 million for
the year ended  June 30,  2003,  due to  decreases  in average  interest-earning
assets,  which  declined  $87.3  million,  or 4.6%,  to $1.79 billion from $1.88
billion, and average yield, which declined to 4.38% from 5.13%.

         Interest income on loans receivable  decreased $7.8 million,  or 21.3%,
to $28.9  million for the year ended June 30, 2004,  from $36.7  million for the
year ended June 30, 2003. The primary factor for the decrease in interest income
on loans  was a  decrease  in the  average  yield on loans to 5.79% for the year
ended June 30,  2004,  from  6.71% for the year  ended  June 30,  2003 which was
accompanied  by a  $47.0  million  decrease  in the  average  balance  of  loans
receivable  from  $546.5  million  for the year ended June 30,  2003,  to $499.5
million for the year ended June 30, 2004. The decreased average balance reflects
the high pace of refinancing and prepayment activity which resulted from the low
interest rate environment and which exceeded origination volume. The lower yield
reflects  generally  lower  interest  rates on  originations  and downward  rate
adjustments on adjustable rate and floating rate loans.

         Interest  income on investment  securities,  including both taxable and
tax-exempt  issues,  increased $5.3 million,  or 58.2%, to $14.4 million for the
year ended June 30, 2004 from $9.1 million for the year ended June 30, 2003. The
increase  resulted from an increase of $171.6 million,  or 67.6%, in the average
balance of investment  securities to $425.3  million  during the year ended June
30,  2004 from $253.7  million  during the year ended June 30,  2003,  partially
offset by a decrease  in the average  yield on  investment  securities  to 3.39%
during the year ended  June 30,  2004 from 3.60%  during the year ended June 30,
2003. The lower yield  reflects  generally  lower  interest  rates  available on
securities  purchased  during the current year.  The increased  average  balance
reflects  the   reinvestment   of  cash  flows  from  repayments  of  loans  and
mortgage-backed securities held to maturity, reflecting management's decision to
shift  assets  from  those  vulnerable  to  high  prepayments,  as  well  as the
redeployment of cash and cash equivalents,  reflecting  management's decision to
move assets from low yielding interest-bearing deposits and securities purchased
under agreements to resell into higher yielding securities.

         Interest income on mortgage-backed  securities decreased $13.8 million,
or 28.9%,  to $34.0  million for the year ended June 30, 2004 from $47.8 million
for the year  ended June 30,  2003.  This was a result of a $162.9  million,  or
18.6%,  decrease in the average balance of mortgage-backed  securities to $713.4
million  during the year ended June 30, 2004 from $876.3 million during the year
ended June 30, 2003,

                                       45



along with a decrease in the average  yield to 4.76%  during the year ended June
30, 2004 from 5.45%  during the year ended June 30,  2003.  The  decrease in the
average balance of  mortgage-backed  securities was due to high repayment levels
due to accelerated prepayments and refinancing of the underlying mortgage loans,
with a  significant  portion of the cash flows being  reinvested  in  investment
securities.  The decline in yield resulted from principal repayments received on
older  higher  yielding  securities  while  new  purchases  were made in a lower
interest rate environment.

         Interest income on securities  purchased under agreements to resell and
other interest-earning  assets decreased $1.6 million, or 55.2%, to $1.3 million
for the year ended June 30,  2004 from $2.9  million for the year ended June 30,
2003.  This was a result of a $49.0 million,  or 23.9%,  decrease in the average
balance of these  assets to $156.3  million  during the year ended June 30, 2004
from $205.3 million  during the year ended June 30, 2003,  along with a decrease
in the  average  yield to 0.85%  during the year ended June 30,  2004 from 1.42%
during the year ended June 30, 2003. The decrease in the average balance was due
to the use of assets in these categories to invest in higher yielding securities
and to  fund  deposit  outflows.  The  decline  in  yield  resulted  from  lower
short-term market interest rates.

         Interest Expense.  Total interest expense  decreased $12.6 million,  or
28.2%,  to $32.1 million for the year ended June 30, 2004 from $44.7 million for
the year ended June 30, 2003, primarily as a result of a decrease in the average
cost of  interest-bearing  liabilities  to 2.01%  during the year ended June 30,
2004 from 2.77%  during the year ended June 30,  2003.  The  average  balance of
interest-bearing  liabilities declined slightly to $1.60 billion during the year
ended June 30, 2004 as compared to $1.61 billion  during the year ended June 30,
2003.  Average cost  decreased  due to lower market  interest  rates  prevailing
during the period.

         Interest  expense on deposits  decreased  $11.8 million,  or 29.6%,  to
$28.1  million for the year ended June 30, 2004 from $39.9  million for the year
ended  June  30,  2003,  primarily  due to a  decrease  in the  average  cost of
interest-bearing  deposits  to 1.85%  during the year  ended June 30,  2004 from
2.63% during the year ended June 30, 2003. The average cost of  certificates  of
deposit  declined  to 2.25% from  3.22%,  the  average  cost of savings and club
accounts declined to 1.23% from 1.58%, and the average cost of  interest-bearing
demand  accounts   declined  to  0.80%  from  1.09%.   The  average  balance  of
interest-bearing  deposits remained  relatively stable overall at $1.52 billion,
although a shift  from  certificates  of deposit to savings  and club and demand
accounts took place.  Certificates  of deposit  declined to $963.1  million from
$1.0 billion,  savings and club accounts increased to $448.5 million from $417.8
million, and  interest-bearing  demand accounts increased to $109.8 million from
$98.9  million.  This shift in deposit  composition  reflects  the impact of the
lower interest rate environment.

         Interest expense on Federal Home Loan Bank advances decreased $769,000,
or 16.1%, to $4.0 million for the year ended June 30, 2004 from $4.8 million for
the year ended June 30, 2003,  as a result of a decrease in the average  balance
to $74.3 million  during the year ended June 30, 2004 from $95.9 million  during
the year ended June 30, 2003,  which more than offset an increase in the average
cost to 5.40%  during the year ended  June 30,  2004 from 4.99%  during the year
ended June 30,  2003.  Both the decline in average  balance and the  increase in
average  cost were the result of the  repayment  of lower cost  short-term  debt
during 2004.

         Provision  for Loan Losses.  Provisions  for loan losses are charged to
operations at a level  required to reflect  credit losses in the loan  portfolio
that are both probable and  reasonable to estimate.  Management,  in determining
the  allowance  for loan  losses,  considers  the  losses  inherent  in the loan
portfolio  and  changes in the nature and volume of our loan  activities,  along
with the general  economic and real estate market  conditions.  We utilize a two
tier approach: (1) identification of impaired loans and

                                       46



establishment of specific loss allowances on such loans;  and (2)  establishment
of general  valuation  allowances  on the  remainder  of our loan  portfolio.  A
specific  loan loss  allowance  is  established  for an  impaired  loan based on
delinquency  status,  size of loan, type of collateral  and/or  appraisal of the
underlying collateral and financial condition of the borrower. General loan loss
allowances  are based upon a combination of factors  including,  but not limited
to, actual loan loss  experience,  composition  of the loan  portfolio,  current
economic conditions and management's judgment.

         There was no provision for loan losses made during the years ended June
30, 2004 and 2003.  During the year ended June 30, 2004,  total loans  decreased
slightly  to $510.2  million at June 30,  2004 from  $512.4  million at June 30,
2003.  Non-performing  loans were $2.3 million, or 0.46%, of total loans at June
30,  2004,  as compared to $2.9  million,  or 0.57%,  of total loans at June 30,
2003.  The allowance for loan losses as a percentage of gross loans  outstanding
was 1.01% at both June 30, 2004 and 2003,  reflecting  balances of $5.1  million
and $5.2 million,  respectively.  The increase in the ratio of the allowance for
loan losses to non-performing  loans to 220.96% at June 30, 2004 from 177.64% at
June 30, 2003 is a result of a $588,000  decrease in  non-performing  loans from
$2.9 million at June 30, 2003 to $2.3 million at June 30, 2004.

         Management  assesses  the  allowance  for loan  losses  monthly.  While
management uses available  information to recognize losses on loans, future loan
loss  provisions may be necessary  based on changes in economic  conditions.  In
addition, regulatory agencies, as an integral part of their examination process,
periodically  review  the  allowance  for  loan  losses  and may  require  us to
recognize additional provisions based on their judgment of information available
to them at the time of their  examination.  The  allowance for loan losses as of
June 30,  2004 was  maintained  at a level that  represented  management's  best
estimate of losses in the loan  portfolio to the extent they were both  probable
and reasonably estimable.

         Non-Interest Income.  Non-interest income decreased $287,000, or 15.5%,
to $1.6  million for the year ended June 30, 2004  compared to $1.8  million for
the year ended June 30, 2003. The decrease was primarily a result of a reduction
in fees and service charge income due to the deposit outflow  experienced during
the year.

         At June 30, 2004,  we had a $3.8 million  investment in bank owned life
insurance.  The  returns  on the  investment  of the cash  value  of the  policy
generate non-interest income. This investment was acquired in our acquisition of
West Essex Bank in 2003 and covers  the  former  president  and chief  executive
officer and former chief lending officer of West Essex Bank.

         Non-Interest Expense.  Non-interest expense decreased $14.9 million, or
33.6%, to $29.5 million for the year ended June 30, 2004, from $44.4 million for
the year ended June 30, 2003.  The decrease was  primarily a result of decreases
of $14.3  million in merger  related  expenses  and  $440,000  in  salaries  and
employee benefits.

         Merger  related  expenses  decreased  $14.3 million to $592,000 for the
year ended June 30, 2004,  from $14.9  million for the year ended June 30, 2003.
Included  in the amount  recorded  during the year ended June 30, 2003 are $12.3
million in expenses related to the payout of employment  contracts,  unexercised
stock options, supplemental benefit plans and incentive stock awards as a result
of both the Pulaski and West Essex mergers.  The expenses  recorded for the year
ended June 30,  2004,  and the  remaining  expenses  for the year ended June 30,
2003,  consisted  primarily of fees due to attorneys and financial  advisors for
their work related to the mergers.

                                       47



         Salaries and employee benefits  decreased  $440,000,  or 2.6%, to $16.5
million for the year ended June 30, 2004, compared to $17.0 million for the year
ended June 30, 2003.  The decrease was the result of the  elimination of several
management and  non-management  positions related to the merger with West Essex,
the impact of which more than  offset  normal  increases  in salary and  benefit
levels.

         All other elements of  non-interest  expense  totaled $12.4 million for
the year ended June 30, 2004, a decrease of  $111,000,  or 0.9%,  from the $12.5
million  total for the year ended June 30, 2003.  This decrease  reflects  costs
savings  realized  as a result of the West  Essex  merger,  partially  offset by
normal increases in these elements.

         Management  expects increased expenses in the future as a result of the
establishment  of the employee  stock  ownership  plan and the  potential  stock
benefit plans, as well as increased costs associated with being a public company
such as periodic reporting, annual meetings,  retention of a transfer agent, and
professional fees.

         Furthermore, non-interest expense for the year ended June 30, 2004 does
not reflect the impact of our new 53,000 square feet administrative  building in
Fairfield,  New Jersey.  We began  moving  management  staff and  administrative
operations into parts of this building in October 2004 and completed the move-in
phase in  December  2004.  The total cost of this  building  is  expected  to be
approximately $13.5 million, which cost will be capitalized and amortized over a
forty-year  period.  Additionally,  it is  estimated  that the annual  operating
expense of this new  building,  excluding  depreciation,  will be  approximately
$450,000.  We expect to open a de novo branch office in Lacey, New Jersey in the
first quarter of 2005, with a total cost of approximately  $2.3 million.  During
2005, we also plan to replace three office  locations with new buildings,  at an
estimated  cost of  approximately  $1.9  million  per  branch.  Furthermore,  in
December of 2004,  we acquired a 3.7 acre parcel of land in West  Caldwell,  New
Jersey for approximately $2.3 million. We intend to construct a branch office at
this  location and  subdivide and lease to third parties the portion of land not
used for the branch building.  Expenses related to the planned  expansion of our
operations  through de novo  branching and the  acquisition of branches or other
financial institutions could also impact earnings in future periods.

         Provision  for Income Taxes.  The provision for income taxes  increased
$508,000 to $5.7  million for the year ended June 30, 2004 from $5.2 million for
the year ended June 30, 2003. The effective  income tax rates were 30.8% for the
year ended June 30, 2004 as compared to 56.4% for the year ended June 30,  2003.
The income tax  expense  for the year ended June 30,  2003 was higher than usual
due  to  the  presence  of  non-deductible   merger  related  costs  and  excess
compensation  expenses,  partially  offset by a tax benefit  related to a former
employee  benefit  plan.  The impact of these items was to  increase  income tax
expense  for the  year  ended  June  30,  2003 by  approximately  $1.9  million.
Excluding  these items,  the effective tax rate for the year ended June 30, 2003
would have been 36.2%.

Comparison of Financial Condition at June 30, 2003 and June 30, 2002

         Our total assets  increased by $90.8 million,  or 4.8%, to $2.0 billion
at June 30, 2003 from $1.9 billion at June 30, 2002.  The increase was reflected
in cash and cash  equivalents,  partially  offset by an overall  decrease in our
securities and loan portfolios, and was funded by growth in deposits.

         Cash and cash equivalents  increased by $228.7 million,  or 235.8%,  to
$325.7  million at June 30, 2003 from $97.0  million at June 30, 2002,  as heavy
prepayments of mortgage-backed  securities and loans receivable were experienced
and a  significant  portion of these  funds  received  were  maintained  in cash
equivalents pending reinvestment in the securities portfolios.

                                       48



         Our securities portfolios, including both available for sale securities
and held to maturity securities, decreased by $140.9 million, or 12.3%, to $1.01
billion at June 30, 2003 from $1.15  billion at June 30,  2002.  Mortgage-backed
securities  held to  maturity  decreased  $286.9  million,  or 29.6%,  to $681.6
million from $968.5 million due to higher  prepayments in the declining interest
rate  environment.  Investment  securities  held to  maturity  increased  $147.9
million,  or 106.1%, to $287.3 million from $139.4 million as the funds received
from   mortgage-backed   security  repayments  and  prepayments  were  partially
reinvested  in this  portfolio  as part of a strategy to shift  assets away from
securities   experiencing  high  prepayments.   Securities  available  for  sale
decreased  marginally to $37.8  million at June 30, 2003,  from $39.7 million at
June 30, 2002.

         Loans  decreased by $81.9 million,  or 13.9%, to $509.2 million at June
30, 2003 from $591.1 million at June 30, 2002.  The decrease in loans  primarily
resulted from higher than normal loan  repayments due to the low market interest
rate  environment  in 2002 and the first half of 2003.  The decrease in the loan
portfolio was largely  experienced in the one-to-four family mortgage loan area,
which  decreased  $92.6 million to $366.4 million at June 30, 2003,  from $459.0
million at June 30, 2002, reflecting the high pace of refinancing and prepayment
activity  which  resulted  from the low  interest  rate  environment  and  which
exceeded origination volume.  Other loan types changed as follows:  multi-family
and commercial  real estate loans increased by $11.7 million to $71.1 million as
part of our  strategy  to  build  this  part of our loan  portfolio,  commercial
business  loans  decreased  by $4.4  million  to $2.4  million,  consumer  loans
increased by $1.3 million to $61.4 million and  construction  loans increased by
$2.2 million to $11.2 million.

         At June 30, 2003, we had an outstanding $67.9 million deposit set aside
for the buyout of the minority  stockholders of West Essex Bancorp,  Inc., which
was utilized when the West Essex merger  transaction  was consummated on July 1,
2003. No similar asset existed at June 30, 2002.

         Total deposits  increased by $134.0 million,  or 9.1%, to $1.61 billion
at June 30,  2003 from $1.48  billion at June 30,  2002.  The  majority  of this
growth was in  certificates  of deposit and savings  accounts,  which  increased
$56.0 million,  or 5.9%, and $67.5 million, or 17.2%,  respectively,  during the
fiscal  year ended  June 30,  2003.  The  increase  was  largely a result of the
opening of the Wyckoff branch in May 2002. The increased deposit growth was used
to purchase securities and repay Federal Home Loan Bank advances.

         Federal Home Loan Bank advances  decreased $36.4 million,  or 32.5%, to
$75.7 million at June 30, 2003 from $112.1 million at June 30, 2002, as maturing
advances  were repaid and not renewed  using a portion of the funds  provided by
deposit growth.

         Equity  decreased $6.8 million,  or 2.2%, to $295.7 million at June 30,
2003,  from $302.5  million at June 30,  2002,  primarily as a result of a $10.3
million reduction  related to the purchase,  on October 18, 2002, of 100% of the
outstanding  minority owned shares of Pulaski Bancorp,  Inc. and $1.3 million in
unrealized  losses on available  for sale  securities,  partially  offset by net
income of $4.1 million.

Comparison  of Operating  Results for the Years Ended June 30, 2003 and June 30,
2002

         General.  Net income for the year ended June 30, 2003 was $4.1 million,
a decrease of $12.4  million,  or 75.4%,  from $16.5  million for the year ended
June 30, 2002. The decrease in net income was due to a $15.3 million increase in
non-interest expense,  primarily  attributable to approximately $12.9 million of
expenses  related to the West Essex  merger and  approximately  $2.0  million of
expenses  related to the  Pulaski  merger,  partially  offset by a $2.7  million
decrease in income taxes.

                                       49



         Net Interest Income.  Net interest income increased by $78,000,  or 0.2
%, to $51.8 million for the year ended June 30, 2003, from $51.7 million for the
year ended June 30, 2002.  The net interest  rate spread  increased  slightly to
2.36% for the year  ended  June 30,  2003 from 2.35% for the year ended June 30,
2002,  while the net interest margin  decreased  during the period to 2.75% from
2.95%.  The net  interest  rate  spread  changed  little  as the 94 basis  point
reduction in the cost of interest-bearing liabilities was closely matched by the
93 basis point  decline in the average  yield on  interest-earning  assets.  The
decrease in the net interest margin is largely reflective of the decrease in the
ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing  liabilities to 116.54% for
the year ended June 30, 2003, from 119.58% for the year ended June 30, 2002.

         Interest Income.  Total interest income  decreased by $9.7 million,  or
9.1%, to $96.5 million for the year ended June 30, 2003 from $106.2  million for
the year ended June 30,  2002.  The primary  factor for the decrease in interest
income was a decrease in the average yield of interest-earning assets from 6.06%
for the year  ended June 30,  2002 to 5.13% for the year  ended  June 30,  2003.
Partially offsetting the decreased yield was a $129.0 million, or 7.4%, increase
in the average balance of interest-earning  assets.  Average yield decreased due
to lower market  interest rates  prevailing  during the period.  The increase in
average assets was funded by an overall increase in average deposits.

         Interest income on loans receivable  decreased $6.6 million,  or 15.2%,
to $36.7  million for the year ended June 30, 2003,  from $43.3  million for the
year ended June 30, 2002. The primary  factors for the decrease in loan interest
income  were a  decrease  of  $56.6  million  in the  average  balance  of loans
receivable  along with a decrease in the average  yield on loans  receivable  to
6.71% from 7.17%.  The  decrease  in average  loans was the result of the higher
than  normal  loan  repayments   which  resulted  from  the  low  interest  rate
environment and which exceeded  origination  volume. The decrease in the average
yield on loans  receivable  reflected  decreased  market  rates of  interest  on
originations as well as downward  interest rate adjustments on floating rate and
adjustable rate loans.

         Interest  income on investment  securities,  including both taxable and
tax-exempt  issues,  decreased  $794,000,  or 8.0%, to $9.1 million for the year
ended June 30, 2003,  from $9.9  million for the year ended June 30,  2002.  The
decrease resulted from a decrease in the average yield on investment  securities
to 3.60% during the year ended June 30,  2003,  from 5.25% during the year ended
June 30, 2002,  which was partially  offset by an increase of $64.6 million,  or
34.2%, in the average balance of investment  securities to $253.7 million during
the year ended June 30, 2003, from $189.1 million during the year ended June 30,
2002. The lower yield reflects  $108.7 million of maturities and calls of higher
yielding issues,  as well as the generally lower interest rates available on the
securities  purchased during the year ended June 30, 2003. The increased average
balance  reflects the reinvestment of a portion of the cash flow from repayments
of loans and mortgage-backed securities held to maturity.

         Interest income on mortgage-backed  securities  decreased $2.4 million,
or 4.8%,  to $47.8  million for the year ended June 30, 2003 from $50.2  million
for the year ended June 30,  2002.  This  decrease was a result of a decrease in
the  average  yield to 5.45%  during the year ended  June 30,  2003,  from 5.93%
during the year ended June 30,  2002,  partially  offset by an increase of $28.7
million, or 3.4%, in the average balance of mortgage-backed securities to $876.3
million during the year ended June 30, 2003, from $847.6 million during the year
ended June 30, 2002.  The decline in yield  resulted from  principal  repayments
received on older higher yielding  securities while new purchases were made in a
lower  interest  rate  environment.  The  change  in  average  balance  was  not
considered significant.

         Interest income on securities  purchased under agreements to resell and
other interest-earning  assets increased $170,000, or 6.2%, to $2.92 million for
the year ended June 30,  2003,  from $2.75  million  for

                                       50



the year ended June 30, 2002.  This was a result of a $92.3  million,  or 81.7%,
increase in the average  balance of these  assets to $205.3  million  during the
year ended June 30,  2003,  from $113.0  million  during the year ended June 30,
2002,  partially  offset by a decrease in the average  yield to 1.42% during the
year ended June 30, 2003,  from 2.44%  during the year ended June 30, 2002.  The
increase in the average  balance was due to the  accumulation of assets in these
categories  which resulted from heavy  repayments on the securities  portfolios.
The decline in yield resulted from lower short-term market interest rates.

         Interest  Expense.  Total interest expense  decreased $9.7 million,  or
17.8%,  to $44.7 million for the year ended June 30, 2003 from $54.4 million for
the year ended June 30, 2002, primarily as a result of a decrease in the average
cost of  interest-bearing  liabilities  to 2.77%  during the year ended June 30,
2003,  from 3.71%  during the year ended June 30,  2002,  partially  offset by a
$149.0,  or  10.2%,   increase  in  the  average  balance  of   interest-bearing
liabilities to $1.61 billion during the year ended June 30, 2003, as compared to
$1.47 billion during the year ended June 30, 2002. Average cost decreased due to
lower market interest rates prevailing during the period.  The growth in average
interest-bearing liabilities is attributed to the growth of the deposit base.

         Interest expense on deposits decreased $9.2 million, or 18.7%, to $39.9
million for the year ended June 30, 2003,  from $49.1 million for the year ended
June 30, 2002. The decrease in interest expense on deposits  primarily  resulted
from a decrease in the average  cost to 2.63% for the year ended June 30,  2003,
from  3.61%  for the year  ended  June 30,  2002,  partially  offset by a $160.6
million, or 11.8 %, increase in the average balance of interest-bearing deposits
to $1.52  billion  during the year ended June 30,  2003,  as  compared  to $1.36
billion  during the year ended June 30, 2002.  The decreased  average cost was a
result of the decline in market  interest  rates from 2002 to 2003. The increase
in the  average  balance  of  interest-bearing  deposits  was the result of both
interest  credited to accounts and growth of the deposit base.  Certificates  of
deposit increased to $1.0 billion from $924.0 million, savings and club accounts
increased to $417.8 million from $340.7  million,  and  interest-bearing  demand
accounts increased to $98.9 million from $93.6 million.

         Interest expense on Federal Home Loan Bank advances decreased $587,000,
or 10.9%,  to $4.8 million for the year ended June 30,  2003,  from $5.4 million
for the year ended June 30,  2002,  primarily  as a result of a decrease  in the
average balance of outstanding advances to $95.9 million for the year ended June
30, 2003, from $107.5 million for the year ended June 30, 2002. The average cost
remained relatively unchanged at 4.99% and 5.00%, respectively.

         Provision  for Loan Losses.  Provisions  for loan losses are charged to
operations at a level  required to reflect  credit losses in the loan  portfolio
that are both probable and  reasonable to estimate.  Management,  in determining
the  allowance  for loan  losses,  considers  the  losses  inherent  in the loan
portfolio  and  changes in the nature and volume of our loan  activities,  along
with the general  economic and real estate market  conditions.  We utilize a two
tier  approach:  (1)  identification  of  impaired  loans and  establishment  of
specific  loss  allowances  on such  loans;  and (2)  establishment  of  general
valuation  allowances  on the remainder of our loan  portfolio.  A specific loan
loss allowance is established for an impaired loan based on delinquency  status,
size of loan, type of collateral  and/or appraisal of the underlying  collateral
and financial condition of the borrower.  General loan loss allowances are based
upon a combination  of factors  including,  but not limited to, actual loan loss
experience,  composition of the loan portfolio,  current economic conditions and
management's judgment.

         There was no provision  for losses for the year ended June 30, 2003, as
compared to $3,000 for the year ended June 30, 2002.  The overall loan portfolio
reflected an $81.8 million, or 13.8%, decrease in total loans. The allowance for
loan losses as a  percentage  of gross loans  outstanding  increased to 1.01% 

                                       51



at June 30,  2003,  from 0.87% at June 30,  2002,  reflecting  balances  of $5.2
million and $5.2 million, respectively.  Non-performing loans as a percentage of
gross loans  increased  only  slightly to 0.57% at June 30, 2003, as compared to
0.55% at June 30, 2002.

         Non-Interest Income. Non-interest income increased $82,000, or 4.6%, to
$1.85 million for the year ended June 30, 2003, as compared to $1.77 million for
the year ended June 30, 2002. This minimal  increase in non-interest  income for
2003, as compared to 2002, was consistent with management's expectations.

         Non-Interest Expense.  Non-interest expense increased $15.3 million, or
52.6%, to $44.4 million for the year ended June 30, 2003, from $29.1 million for
the year ended June 30, 2002.  The  increase  was  primarily a result of a $14.3
million increase in merger related expenses,  partially offset by a $2.3 million
decrease in goodwill and intangible asset amortization.

         Merger related  expenses  increased  $14.3 million to $14.9 million for
the year ended June 30,  2003,  from  $619,000 for the year ended June 30, 2002.
Included in the amount  recorded  during the year ended June 30, 2003, are $12.3
million in expenses related to the payout of employment  contracts,  unexercised
stock options, supplemental benefit plans and incentive stock awards as a result
of both the Pulaski and West Essex mergers.  The remaining expenses recorded for
the year ended June 30, 2003,  and for the year ended June 30,  2002,  consisted
primarily of fees due attorneys and financial advisors for their work related to
the mergers.

         Goodwill and intangible  asset  amortization  decreased to $636,000 for
the year  ended June 30,  2003,  from $2.9  million  for the year ended June 30,
2002,  due to the  adoption,  effective  July 1, 2003, of Statement of Financial
Accounting  Standards No. 142, "Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets." Statement
No. 142 eliminated the  amortization of goodwill and,  accordingly,  no goodwill
related amortization expense was recognized during the year ended June 30, 2003.
Goodwill amortization totaled $2.3 million during the year ended June 30, 2002.

         All other elements of  non-interest  expense  totaled $28.8 million for
the year ended June 30, 2003,  an increase of $3.3 million,  or 12.9%,  over the
$25.5  million  amount for the year ended June 30, 2002.  The increases in these
elements are attributable to the growth of the institution and were reflected in
salary and employee benefits,  net occupancy expenses,  equipment,  advertising,
and miscellaneous expenses.

         Provision  for Income Taxes.  The provision for income taxes  decreased
$2.7 million to $5.2 million for the year ended June 30, 2003, from $7.9 million
for the year ended June 30, 2002. The effective  income tax rates were 56.4% for
the year ended June 30,  2003,  as compared to 32.5% for the year ended June 30,
2002.  The income tax expense for the year ended June 30, 2003,  was higher than
usual due to the  presence of  non-deductible  merger  related  costs and excess
compensation  expenses,  partially  offset by a tax benefit  related to a former
employee  benefit  plan.  The impact of these items was to  increase  income tax
expense  for the year  ended  June 30,  2003,  by  approximately  $1.9  million.
Excluding these items,  the effective tax rate for the year ended June 30, 2003,
would have been 36.2%.  The effective tax rate for the year ended June 30, 2003,
was  expected  to be higher  than in the  preceding  year due to the effect of a
change in the New Jersey  statutory  tax rate whereby the statutory tax rate was
increased from 3% to 9% effective January 1, 2002.

                                       52



         Average   Balance  Sheet.   The  following  table  sets  forth  certain
information relating to Kearny Financial Corp. at and for the periods indicated.
The average  yields and costs are  derived by dividing  income or expense by the
average  balance  of  assets  or  liabilities,  respectively,  for  the  periods
presented. Average balances are derived from daily, weekly and monthly balances.
Management does not believe that the use of other than daily balances has caused
any material differences in the information presented in the table.



                              At September 30,                          For the Three Months Ended September 30,
                          -------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    2004                              2004                                    2003
                          -------------------------  --------------------------------------- -------------------------------------
                              Actual     Actual        Average                   Average       Average                   Average
                             Balance   Yield/Cost      Balance     Interest    Yield/Cost      Balance      Interest    Yield/Cost
                             -------   ----------      -------     --------    ----------      -------      --------    ----------
                                                              (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                                      
Interest-earning 
assets:
 Loans receivable, 
   net(1)..............    $  515,196     5.63%     $ 510,730     $ 7,132          5.59%    $ 498,160     $ 7,659          6.15%
 Mortgage-backed 
   securities
   held to maturity....       724,876     4.83        754,994       8,649          4.58       659,658       7,976          4.84
Investment 
securities:(2)
   Tax-exempt..........       172,419     3.84        167,206       1,608          3.85       125,304       1,284          4.10
   Taxable.............       314,685     3.05        314,754       2,403          3.05       253,147       1,944          3.07
 Securities purchased
   under agreements 
   to resell...........             -        -              -           -             -       200,000         546          1.09
 Other interest-earning 
   assets(3)...........        30,318     1.85         34,585         115          1.33        87,891         247          1.12
                           ----------              ----------     -------                  ----------     -------              
  Total interest-earning
    assets.............     1,757,494     4.60      1,782,269      19,907          4.47     1,824,160      19,656          4.31
                                                                  -------                                 -------              
Non-interest-earning 
  assets...............       146,715                 141,747                                 140,155
                           ----------              ----------                              ----------
  Total assets.........    $1,904,209              $1,924,016                              $1,964,315
                           ==========              ==========                              ==========

Interest-bearing 
liabilities:
 Interest-bearing 
   demand..............    $  106,444     0.75      $ 106,638    $    192          0.72     $ 108,047    $    193          0.71
 Savings and club......       484,117     1.00        481,667       1,246          1.03       458,645       1,769          1.54
 Certificates of 
   deposit.............       869,184     2.11        884,725       4,674          2.11       984,699       6,130          2.49
 Federal Home Loan 
   Bank advances.......        84,100     4.62         86,103         991          4.60        75,436       1,066          5.65
                           ----------              ----------     -------                  ----------      ------              
  Total interest-
    bearing 
    liabilities........     1,543,845     1.80      1,559,133       7,103          1.82     1,626,827       9,158          2.25
                                                                   ------                                  ------              
Non-interest-bearing 
  liabilities..........        62,562                  70,552                                  57,545
                           ----------              ----------                              ----------
 Total liabilities.....     1,606,407               1,629,685                               1,684,372
Stockholders' equity...       297,802                 294,331                                 279,943
                           ----------              ----------                              ----------
 Total liabilities 
   and stockholders' 
   equity..............    $1,904,209              $1,924,016                              $1,964,315
                           ==========              ==========                              ==========
Net interest income....                                           $12,804                                 $10,498
                                                                  =======                                 =======
Interest rate 
  spread(4)............                   2.80%                                    2.65%                                   2.06%
                                         =====                                    =====                                  ====== 
Net yield on interest-
  earning  assets(5)...                                                            2.87%                                   2.30%
                                                                                  =====                                   ===== 
Ratio of average 
  interest-earning 
  assets to average 
  interest-bearing 
  liabilities..........           1.14x                   1.14x                                   1.12x
                                ======                  ======                                  ====== 


-----------------
(1)  Non-accruing  loans have been included in loans receivable,  and the effect
     of such inclusion was not material.
(2)  Includes both available for sale and held to maturity securities.
(3)  Includes  interest-bearing deposits at other banks, federal funds purchased
     and Federal Home Loan Bank of New York capital stock.
(4)  Interest rate spread represents the difference between the average yield on
     interest-earning   assets  and  the   average   cost  of   interest-bearing
     liabilities.
(5)  Net yield on  interest-earning  assets  represents net interest income as a
     percentage of average interest-earning assets.

                                       53



         Average   Balance  Sheet.   The  following  table  sets  forth  certain
information relating to Kearny Financial Corp. at and for the periods indicated.
The average  yields and costs are  derived by dividing  income or expense by the
average  balance  of  assets  or  liabilities,  respectively,  for  the  periods
presented. Average balances are derived from daily, weekly and monthly balances.
Management does not believe that the use of other than daily balances has caused
any material differences in the information presented in the table.




                                                                      For the Year Ended June 30,
                         At June 30,     ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            2004                      2004                         2003                         2002
                   --------------------- -----------------------------  --------------------------  ------------------------------
                               Actual                        Average                      Average                         Average
                       Actual  Yield/      Average            Yield/    Average           Yield/    Average                Yield/
                       Balance Cost        Balance Interest    Cost     Balance  Interest  Cost     Balance    Interest     Cost
                      -------  ------      ------- -------- ---------   -------  -------- -------   -------    --------  ---------
                                                                        (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                          
Interest-
earning assets:
 Loans 
   receivable, 
   net(1)..........   $505,794  5.60%  $   499,510  $28,919    5.79%    $546,521  $36,673  6.71%  $ 603,131   $43,258     7.17%
 Mortgage-backed 
   securities
   held to 
   maturity........    771,353  4.86       713,422   33,980    4.76      876,348   47,764  5.45     847,646    50,225     5.93
Investment 
securities:(2)
   Tax-exempt......    161,469  3.89       141,630    5,702    4.03       98,626    4,346  4.41      64,767     3,066     4.73
   Taxable.........    315,965  3.03       283,708    8,724    3.07      155,051    4,787  3.09     124,323     6,861     5.52
 Securities 
   purchased under
   agreements to 
   resell..........         --    --        95,385      982    1.03      118,077    1,577  1.34      36,538       938     2.57
 Other interest-
   earning 
   assets(3).......     29,872  1.13        60,885      347    0.57       87,238    1,345  1.54      76,415     1,814     2.37
                   -----------         -----------  -------           ----------   ------        ----------  --------
  Total interest-
    earning assets.  1,784,453  4.60     1,794,540   78,654    4.38    1,881,861   96,492  5.13   1,752,820   106,162     6.06
                                                     ------                       ------                      -------
Non-interest-
  earning assets...    152,065             144,698                        83,357                     61,711
                     ---------           ---------                    ----------                 ----------
  Total assets..... $1,936,518          $1,939,238                    $1,965,218                 $1,814,531
                     =========           =========                     =========                  =========
Interest-bearing 
liabilities:
 Interest-bearing 
   demand.......... $  103,648  0.75   $   109,830      882    0.80   $   98,926    1,074  1.09      93,638     1,289     1.38
 Savings and club..    481,466  1.00       448,509    5,508    1.23      417,780    6,604  1.58     340,655     7,873     2.31
 Certificates of 
   deposit.........    897,019  1.92       963,089   21,692    2.25    1,002,229   32,230  3.22     924,011    39,907     4.32
 Federal Home Loan 
  Bank advances....     94,234  4.21        74,340    4,018    5.40       95,853    4,787  4.99     107,459     5,374     5.00
                    ----------           ---------   ------           ----------  -------         ---------   -------
  Total interest-
    bearing 
    liabilities....  1,576,367  1.70     1,595,768   32,100    2.01    1,614,788   44,695  2.77   1,465,763    54,443     3.71
                                                     ------                        ------                      ------
Non-interest-
  bearing 
  liabilities......     66,646              57,846                        56,217                     51,560
                    ----------           ---------                    ----------                 ----------
 Total liabilities.  1,643,013           1,653,614                     1,671,005                  1,517,323
Stockholders' 
  equity...........    293,505             285,624                       294,213                    297,208
                     ---------           ---------                    ----------                  ---------
 Total liabilities
   and stockholders' 
   equity.......... $1,936,518          $1,939,238                    $1,965,218                 $1,814,531
                     =========           =========                     =========                  =========
Net interest 
  income...........                                 $46,554                       $51,797                     $51,719
                                                     ======                        ======                      ======
Interest rate 
  spread(4)........             2.90%                          2.37%                       2.36%                          2.35%
                                ====                           ====                        ====                           ====
Net yield on 
  interest-
  earning 
  assets(5)........                                            2.59%                       2.75%                          2.95%
                                                               ====                        ====                           ====
Ratio of average 
  interest-earning 
  assets to
  average 
  interest-bearing 
  liabilities......       1.13x               1.12x                         1.17x                      1.20x
                        ======              ======                         =====                      =====


-----------------
(1)  Non-accruing  loans have been included in loans receivable,  and the effect
     of such inclusion was not material.
(2)  Includes both available for sale and held to maturity securities.
(3)  Includes  interest-bearing  deposits at other banks federal funds purchased
     and Federal Home Loan Bank of New York capital stock.
(4)  Interest rate spread represents the difference between the average yield on
     interest-earning   assets  and  the   average   cost  of   interest-bearing
     liabilities.
(5)  Net yield on  interest-earning  assets  represents net interest income as a
     percentage of average interest-earning assets.

                                       54



         Rate/Volume  Analysis.  The following table reflects the sensitivity of
Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  interest  income and interest  expense to changes in
volume and in  prevailing  interest  rates  during the periods  indicated.  Each
category  reflects the: (1) changes in volume  (changes in volume  multiplied by
old rate);  (2) changes in rate (changes in rate multiplied by old volume);  and
(3) net change. The net change attributable to the combined impact of volume and
rate has been allocated  proportionally to the absolute dollar amounts of change
in each.



                                             Three Months
                                          Ended September 30,              Year Ended June 30,               Year Ended June 30,
                                    -------------------------------  -------------------------------- ------------------------------
                                              2004 vs. 2003                    2004 vs. 2003                    2003 vs. 2002
                                    -------------------------------  -------------------------------- ------------------------------
                                          Increase (Decrease)                Increase (Decrease)           Increase (Decrease)
                                                 Due to                           Due to                           Due to
                                    -------------------------------  ------------------------------ --------------------------------
                                    Volume        Rate         Net     Volume    Rate         Net     Volume     Rate         Net
                                    ------       ------       -----    ------   ------       -----    ------    ------       ----
                                                                               (In thousands)
                                                                                                      
Interest and dividend income:
 Loans receivable ............... $    188    $   (715)   $   (527) $ (2,989) $ (4,765)   $ (7,754) $ (3,911) $ (2,674)   $ (6,585)
 Mortgage-backed securities 
   held to maturity .............    1,115        (442)        673    (8,201)   (5,583)    (13,784)    1,674    (4,135)     (2,461)
 Investment securities:
   Tax-exempt ...................      407         (83)        324     1,758      (402)      1,356     1,500      (220)      1,280
   Taxable ......................      472         (13)        459     3,968       (31)      3,937     1,427    (3,501)     (2,074)
 Securities purchased under 
   agreements to resell..........     (273)       (273)       (546)     (270)     (325)       (595)    1,266      (627)        639
 Other interest-earning assets ..     (171)         39        (132)     (323)     (675)       (998)      230      (699)       (469)
                                  --------    --------    --------  --------  --------    --------  --------  --------    --------
  Total interest-earning assets . $  1,738    $ (1,487)   $    251  $ (6,057) $(11,781)   $(17,838) $  2,186  $(11,856)   $ (9,670)
                                  ========    ========    ========  ========  ========    ========  ========  ========    ========

Interest expense:
 Interest-bearing demand ........ $     (3)   $      2    $     (1) $    112  $   (304)   $   (192) $     69  $   (284)   $   (215)
 Savings and club ...............       85        (608)       (523)      456    (1,552)     (1,096)    1,546    (2,815)     (1,269)
 Certificates of deposit ........     (582)       (874)     (1,456)   (1,210)   (9,328)    (10,538)    3,157   (10,834)     (7,677)
 Advances from Federal 
   Home Loan Bank ...............      139        (214)        (75)   (1,138)      369        (769)     (576)      (11)       (587)
                                  --------    --------    --------  --------  --------    --------  --------  --------    --------
   Total interest-bearing
     liabilities ................ $   (361)   $ (1,694)   $ (2,055) $ (1,780) $(10,815)   $(12,595) $  4,196  $(13,944)   $ (9,748)
                                  ========    ========    ========  ========  ========    ========  ========  ========    ========

Change in net interest income ... $  2,099    $    207    $  2,306  $ (4,277) $   (966)   $ (5,243) $ (2,010) $  2,088    $     78
                                  ========    ========    ========  ========  ========    ========  ========  ========    ========

                                       55



Management of Interest Rate Risk and Market Risk

         Qualitative   Analysis.   Because  the   majority  of  our  assets  and
liabilities  are sensitive to changes in interest  rates, a significant  form of
market  risk for us is  interest  rate  risk,  or  changes  in  interest  rates.
Notwithstanding  the  unpredictability  of  future  interest  rates,  management
expects that changes in interest rates may have a significant, adverse impact on
our net interest income.

         Our  ability  to make a  profit  largely  depends  on our net  interest
income,  which could be negatively  affected by changes in interest  rates.  Net
interest income is the difference between:

o    the interest income we earn on our  interest-earning  assets, such as loans
     and securities; and

o    the interest expense we pay on our  interest-bearing  liabilities,  such as
     deposits and amounts we borrow.

         The rates we earn on our assets are  generally  fixed for a contractual
period of time.  We,  like many  savings  institutions,  have  liabilities  that
generally  have  shorter  contractual   maturities  than  our  assets,  such  as
certificates of deposit,  or have no stated maturity,  such as savings and money
market  deposits.  This  imbalance can create  significant  earnings  volatility
because market  interest rates change over time. In a period of rising  interest
rates,  the interest  income earned on our assets,  which  consist  primarily of
long-term,  fixed-rate  securities,  may not increase as rapidly as the interest
paid on our liabilities.

         We are  vulnerable  to  volatility  in our  earnings  as a result of an
increase in interest rates because the majority of our  interest-earning  assets
consist of long-term,  fixed rate assets.  At September  30, 2004,  84.9% of our
loans with  contractual  maturities  of greater than one year had fixed rates of
interest, and 79.1% of our total loans had contractual maturities of ten or more
years.  At  September  30,  2004,  we held  $724.9  million  of  mortgage-backed
securities,  representing 38.1% of our assets. We invest generally in fixed-rate
securities and substantially all of our mortgage-backed  securities at September
30, 2004 had contractual  maturities of ten or more years. In an increasing rate
environment,  our cost of funds is expected to increase  more  rapidly  than the
interest  earned on our loan  portfolio  and  securities  portfolio  because our
primary source of funds is deposits with generally  shorter  maturities than the
maturities  on our  loans and  investment  securities.  Having  interest-bearing
liabilities  that reprice more frequently than  interest-earning  assets will be
detrimental  during  periods of rising  interest  rates and could  cause our net
interest  rate spread to shrink  because the increase in the rates we would earn
on our securities and loan portfolios may be less than the increase in the rates
we would pay on deposits and borrowings.

         In a period  of  falling  interest  rates,  prepayments  of  loans  and
mortgage-backed  securities generally will increase as borrowers refinance their
debt in order to reduce their  borrowing cost.  This causes  reinvestment  risk,
because in a falling  rate  environment  we are  generally  not able to reinvest
prepayments  at rates that are  comparable to the rates we earned on the prepaid
loans or securities.  A falling rate  environment  would result in a decrease in
rates we pay on deposits  and  borrowings,  but the  decrease in the cost of our
funds may not be as great as the  decrease in the yields on our  mortgage-backed
securities and loan portfolios. This could cause a narrowing of our net interest
rate spread and could cause a decrease in our earnings.

         The Board of Directors has established an Interest Rate Risk Management
Committee,  comprised of Directors Hopkins,  Regan,  Aanensen,  Mazza and Parow,
which is  responsible  for monitoring  interest rate risk.  Our Chief  Financial
Officer  also  participates  in this  committee  as a  management  liaison.  The
committee meets quarterly to address  management of our assets and  liabilities,
including review of our

                                       56



short term liquidity  position;  loan and deposit pricing and production volumes
and alternative funding sources;  current investments;  average lives, durations
and repricing frequencies of loans and securities;  and a variety of other asset
and liability management topics. The results of the committee's quarterly review
are reported to the full Board,  which makes  adjustments  to our interest  rate
risk policy and strategies as it considers necessary and appropriate.

         Quantitative  Analysis.  The following  tables  present  Kearny Federal
Savings  Bank's net portfolio  value as of September 30, 2004 and June 30, 2004,
respectively.  The net portfolio values shown in these tables were calculated by
the  Office of  Thrift  Supervision,  based on  information  provided  by Kearny
Federal Savings Bank.


                              At September 30, 2004
                  --------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Net Portfolio Value
                   Net Portfolio Value           as % of Present Value of Assets
                   -------------------           -------------------------------
  Changes in                                        Net Portfolio    Basis Point
   Rates(1)        $ Amount   $ Change   % Change    Value Ratio        Change
   --------        --------   --------   --------    -----------        ------
                 (Dollars in thousands)
+300 bp            166,167   -136,551       -45%          9.46%         -635 bp
+200 bp            212,904    -89,814       -30%         11.76%         -405 bp
+100 bp            258,914    -43,804       -14%         13.89%         -191 bp
   0 bp            302,718                               15.81%
-100 bp            330,752     28,034        +9%         16.95%         +114 bp

----------------
(1)  The  -200bp and -300bp  scenarios  are not shown due to the low  prevailing
     interest rate environment.

         This analysis also indicated that as of September 30, 2004 an immediate
and permanent 2.0% increase in interest rates would cause an  approximately  14%
decrease in our net interest income.



                                     At June 30, 2004
                    ------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Net Portfolio Value
                       Net Portfolio Value       as % of Present Value of Assets
                    -------------------------    -------------------------------
  Changes in                                       Net Portfolio     Basis Point
   Rates(1)        $ Amount   $ Change  % Change    Value Ratio        Change
   --------        --------   --------  --------    -----------        ------
                 (Dollars in thousands)
+300 bp            135,922   -145,263      -52%          7.70%         -687 bp
+200 bp            184,947    -96,238      -34%         10.16%         -441 bp
+100 bp            232,894    -48,291      -17%         12.42%         -215 bp
      0 bp         281,185                              14.57%
- 100  bp          315,088     33,903      +12%         15.98%         +141 bp

-------------
(1)  The  -200bp and -300bp  scenarios  are not shown due to the low  prevailing
     interest rate environment.

         This analysis also  indicated that as of June 30, 2004 an immediate and
permanent  2.0%  increase in interest  rates  would cause an  approximately  15%
decrease in our net interest income.

         Future  interest  rates or their effect on net  portfolio  value or net
interest  income are not  predictable.  Computations  of prospective  effects of
hypothetical interest rate changes are based on numerous

                                       57



assumptions,  including  relative levels of market interest rates,  prepayments,
and  deposit  run-offs,  and should not be relied upon as  indicative  of actual
results. Certain shortcomings are inherent in this type of computation. Although
certain  assets  and  liabilities  may  have  similar  maturity  or  periods  of
repricing, they may react at different times and in different degrees to changes
in the market interest  rates.  The interest rate on certain types of assets and
liabilities,  such as demand  deposits and savings  accounts,  may  fluctuate in
advance of changes  in market  interest  rates,  while  rates on other  types of
assets and liabilities may lag behind changes in market interest rates.  Certain
assets,  such as  adjustable  rate  mortgages,  generally  have  features  which
restrict  changes in interest  rates on a short-term  basis and over the life of
the asset.  In the event of a change in interest  rates,  prepayments  and early
withdrawal  levels  could  deviate  significantly  from those  assumed in making
calculations set forth above. Additionally,  an increased credit risk may result
as the ability of many borrowers to service their debt may decrease in the event
of an interest rate increase.

         Notwithstanding  the discussion  above, the quantitative  interest rate
analysis presented above indicates that a rapid increase in interest rates would
adversely affect our net interest margin and earnings.

Liquidity and Commitments

         We are  required  to have  enough  investments  that  qualify as liquid
assets  in order to  maintain  sufficient  liquidity  to ensure a safe and sound
operation. Liquidity may increase or decrease depending upon the availability of
funds and comparative  yields on investments in relation to the return on loans.
Historically,  we have  maintained  liquid  assets above  levels  believed to be
adequate to meet the  requirements  of normal  operations,  including  potential
deposit  outflows.  Cash flow projections are regularly  reviewed and updated to
assure that adequate liquidity is maintained.

         Our liquidity,  represented by cash and cash equivalents,  is a product
of our operating, investing and financing activities. The largest use of cash by
investing  activities  during  the  year  ended  June  30,  2004 was to fund the
purchase of $425.1 million of mortgage-backed  securities. At June 30, 2004, our
cash and cash equivalents  totaled $39.5 million,  as compared to $325.7 million
at June 30, 2003.  Heavy  prepayments  of  mortgage-backed  securities and loans
receivable  were  experienced  during  the  year  ended  June  30,  2003  and  a
significant  portion of these funds received were maintained in cash equivalents
pending  reinvestment in the securities  portfolios.  Cash and cash  equivalents
increased by 235.8%,  to $325.7  million at June 30, 2003 from $97.0  million at
June 30, 2002. The decrease in cash and cash equivalents during 2004 also offset
a decrease in cash provided by financing  activities as total deposits  declined
during 2004 by $76.2 million  compared to an increase in total  deposits  during
2003 of $134.0 million.

         Our primary  sources of funds are deposits,  amortization,  prepayments
and maturities of mortgage-backed  securities and outstanding loans,  maturities
of investment  securities and other  short-term  investments  and funds provided
from  operations.  While scheduled  payments from the  amortization of loans and
mortgage-backed  securities  and maturing  investment  securities and short-term
investments are relatively  predictable sources of funds, deposit flows and loan
and  mortgage-backed  securities  prepayments are greatly  influenced by general
interest rates,  economic  conditions and  competition.  In addition,  we invest
excess funds in short-term  interest-earning  assets, which provide liquidity to
meet lending requirements. We also generate cash through borrowings.

         Liquidity management is both a daily and long-term function of business
management.  Excess  liquidity is generally  invested in short-term  investments
such as  overnight  deposits or U.S.  agency  securities.  We use our sources of
funds primarily to meet our ongoing commitments, to pay maturing

                                       58



certificates of deposit and savings withdrawals, to fund loan commitments and to
maintain our portfolio of mortgage-backed  securities and investment securities.
At  September  30,  2004,  the  total  approved  loan  origination   commitments
outstanding amounted to $11.7 million and commitments to purchase  participation
interests in loans totaled  $607,000.  At the same date,  unused lines of credit
were  $28.7  million  and  construction  loans in  process  were  $5.6  million.
Certificates of deposit scheduled to mature in one year or less at September 30,
2004,  totaled $668.7 million.  Although the average cost of deposits  decreased
throughout 2004, management's policy is to maintain deposit rates at levels that
are  competitive  with  other  local  financial   institutions.   Based  on  the
competitive  rates and on  historical  experience,  management  believes  that a
significant portion of maturing deposits will remain with Kearny Federal Savings
Bank. At September 30, 2004, the total collateralized  borrowing limit was $97.8
million,  of which we had $84.1  million  outstanding,  giving us the ability at
September 30, 2004, to borrow an additional  $13.7 million from the Federal Home
Loan Bank of New York as a funding source to meet  commitments and for liquidity
purposes.

         If the need for  additional  borrowing  arises,  we have the  option of
pledging  additional  collateral to  significantly  increase our  collateralized
borrowing  limit and enable us to obtain  advances up to a total borrowing limit
of 25% of our assets. For example,  in the event that we are unable or unwilling
to pay  market  rates on the  significant  amount  of  certificates  of  deposit
maturing in one year or less,  we could obtain  replacement  funding by pledging
additional  collateral,  thus securing a greater  borrowing limit and generating
the  ability to borrow  additional  funds from the  Federal  Home Loan Bank.  At
September 30, 2004, our total Federal Home Loan Bank borrowing  limit was $476.1
million and we had the ability to pledge  additional  collateral to increase our
collateralized  borrowing  limit from $97.8  million to the full $476.1  million
limit. At September 30, 2004, we had $1.21 billion of securities we could pledge
as collateral in order to obtain secured borrowings,  of which $97.8 million was
pledged.

         As noted above,  loan  prepayments  are greatly  influenced  by general
interest rates. At September 30, 2004, 82.8% of our loan portfolio  consisted of
fixed rate loans with  maturities of greater than one year. If a rising interest
rate environment were to occur, our liquidity would be affected because we would
expect that the rate of  prepayments  on fixed rate loans would  decrease,  thus
decreasing  the  amount  of funds  coming  from  prepayments  and  reducing  our
liquidity.

         The  following  table   discloses  our   contractual   obligations  and
commitments as of September 30, 2004.





                                                           Less Than                                      After
                                              Total          1 Year       1-3 Years      4-5 Years       5 Years
                                             -------       ---------      ---------      ---------      --------
                                                                       (In thousands)

                                                                                            
Federal Home Loan Bank advances...........   $84,100         $22,556         $6,217       $45,327        $10,000
                                             -------         -------         ------       -------        -------
    Total.................................   $84,100         $22,556         $6,217       $45,327        $10,000
                                             =======         =======         ======       =======        =======





                                             Total
                                            Amounts       Less Than                                       Over
                                           Committed        1 Year        1-3 Years     4-5 Years       5 Years
                                           ---------       --------       ---------     ---------      --------
                                                                       (In thousands)
                                                                                                        
Lines of credit(1)........................   $28,668         $     -         $5,118       $     -        $23,550
Construction loans in process.............     2,862           2,862              -             -              -
Other commitments to extend credit(1).....     9,449           9,449              -             -              -
                                             -------         -------         ------       -------        -------
    Total.................................   $40,979         $12,311         $5,118       $     -        $23,550
                                             =======         =======         ======       =======        =======

----------------
(1)  Represents amounts committed to customers.

                                       59


         Our material  capital  expenditure  plans include the completion of our
new   administrative   building  in  Fairfield,   New  Jersey  with  anticipated
post-September  30, 2004  expenditures  of $3.3 million.  The total cost of this
building is  expected  to be  approximately  $13.5  million,  which cost will be
capitalized  and amortized  over a forty-year  period.  Our capital  expenditure
plans also include the Lacey, New Jersey de novo branch office, expected to open
in the first quarter of 2005. The total cost of the Lacey office is estimated to
be approximately $2.3 million.  Additional  capital  expenditure plans relate to
renovations and significant improvements to seven branch offices, which includes
the  replacement  of three office  locations  with new  buildings.  We expect to
complete such renovations,  improvements and construction by the end of calendar
year  2005,  and we  anticipate  approximately  $7.1  million  in funds  will be
required for the plans related to these seven offices.  Furthermore, in December
of 2004, we acquired a 3.7 acre parcel of land in West Caldwell,  New Jersey. We
intend to construct a branch  office at this location and subdivide and lease to
third parties the portion of land not used for the branch building.

         The general business  purpose of these  expenditures is to maintain and
improve Kearny Federal Savings Bank's facilities.  We anticipate that cash flows
from our  normal  operations  will be a  sufficient  source  of funds  for these
expenditure plans.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

         We are a party to financial instruments with  off-balance-sheet risk in
the normal  course of our business of investing in loans and  securities as well
as in the normal course of  maintaining  and improving  Kearny  Federal  Savings
Bank's facilities.  These financial  instruments  include  significant  purchase
commitments,  such as  commitments  related  to  capital  expenditure  plans and
commitments to purchase investment securities or mortgage-backed securities, and
commitments to extend credit to meet the financing  needs of our  customers.  At
September 30, 2004,  we had no  significant  off-balance  sheet  commitments  to
purchase securities and our significant purchase commitments as of September 30,
2004   related  to  capital   expenditure   plans   consisted   of   anticipated
post-September 30, 2004 expenditures of approximately $3.3 million in connection
with the completion of our new administrative building in Fairfield, New Jersey.

         Commitments  to extend  credit are  agreements to lend to a customer as
long as there is no  violation of any  condition  established  in the  contract.
Commitments  generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination  clauses
and may require  payment of a fee.  Our  exposure to credit loss in the event of
nonperformance by the other party to the financial instrument for commitments to
extend  credit  is  represented  by the  contractual  notional  amount  of those
instruments.  We  use  the  same  credit  policies  in  making  commitments  and
conditional obligations as we do for on-balance-sheet  instruments. At September
30, 2004, the total approved loan origination  commitments  outstanding amounted
to $11.7 million and  commitments to purchase  participation  interests in loans
totaled  $607,000.  At the same date,  unused lines of credit were $28.7 million
and  construction  loans  in  process  were  $5.6  million.  Since  many  of the
commitments  are  expected  to  expire  without  being  drawn  upon,  the  total
commitment amounts do not necessarily  represent future cash  requirements.  For
additional   information   regarding  our  outstanding  lending  commitments  at
September  30,  2004,  see  Note  16 to the  consolidated  financial  statements
beginning on page F-1.

Capital

         Consistent  with its goals to operate a sound and profitable  financial
organization,  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank  actively  seeks to maintain a well
capitalized institution in accordance with regulatory standards. As of September
30, 2004, Kearny Federal Savings Bank exceeded all capital requirements of

                                       60



the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's  regulatory
capital ratios at September 30, 2004 were as follows:  core capital 11.15%; Tier
I risk-based capital 31.27%; and total risk-based capital 33.18%. The regulatory
capital requirements to be considered well capitalized are 5.0%, 6.0% and 10.0%,
respectively.

Impact of Inflation

         The financial  statements  included in this document have been prepared
in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States
of America.  These principles  require the measurement of financial position and
operating results in terms of historical dollars, without considering changes in
the relative purchasing power of money over time due to inflation.

         Our primary assets and liabilities are monetary in nature. As a result,
interest  rates  have a more  significant  impact  on our  performance  than the
effects  of  general  levels  of  inflation.  Interest  rates,  however,  do not
necessarily  move in the same  direction or with the same magnitude as the price
of goods and services,  since such prices are affected by inflation. In a period
of rapidly rising interest rates, the liquidity and maturities of our assets and
liabilities are critical to the maintenance of acceptable performance levels.

         The principal effect of inflation on earnings,  as distinct from levels
of interest rates, is in the area of non-interest expense. Expense items such as
employee  compensation,  employee benefits and occupancy and equipment costs may
be  subject to  increases  as a result of  inflation.  An  additional  effect of
inflation  is the  possible  increase  in the  dollar  value  of the  collateral
securing loans that we have made. We are unable to determine the extent, if any,
to which  properties  securing our loans have appreciated in dollar value due to
inflation.

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

         In December 2002, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (the "FASB")
issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 148, "Accounting
for Stock-Based  Compensation - Transition and Disclosure - an amendment of FASB
Statement No. 123." This statement  provides  alternative  methods of transition
for a  voluntary  change  to the fair  value  based  method  of  accounting  for
stock-based  employee  compensation.  In  addition,  this  statement  amends the
disclosure requirements of SFAS No. 123 to require prominent disclosures in both
annual and  interim  financial  statements  about the method of  accounting  for
stock-based employee compensation and the effects of the method used on reported
results.

         In  December  2004,  the FASB  issued  SFAS  No.  123  (revised  2004),
"Share-Based Payment." This statement revises the original guidance contained in
SFAS No. 123 and supersedes  Accounting Principles Board ("APB") Opinion No. 25,
"Accounting  for  Stock  Issued to  Employees,  and its  related  implementation
guidance.  Under SFAS No. 123  (revised  2004),  a public  entity such as Kearny
Financial  Corp.  will be  required  to measure  the cost of  employee  services
received in exchange for an award of equity  instruments based on the grant-date
fair value of the award (with limited  exceptions)  and recognize such cost over
the period  during which an employee is required to provide  service in exchange
for the reward  (usually  the  vesting  period).  For stock  options and similar
instruments, grant-date fair value will be estimated using option-pricing models
adjusted for the unique characteristics of instruments (unless observable market
prices for the same or similar instruments are available).  For public entities,
such as Kearny Financial  Corp.,  that do not or will not file as small business
issuers, SFAS No. 123 (revised 2004)

                                       61



is effective as of the beginning of the first interim or annual reporting period
that begins after June 15, 2005.

         The aforementioned  pronouncements related to stock-based payments have
no  effect  on  Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  historical   consolidated  financial
statements as we do not currently have any stock-based  payment plans.  However,
the stock-based payment plans contemplated  within this document,  consisting of
the stock  option  and  restricted  stock  award  plans,  will be subject to the
provisions  of SFAS No.  123  (revised  2004).  While  the  actual  costs of our
stock-based  payment plans will be based on grant-date fair value,  which cannot
be determined at this time, additional  information on the possible future costs
of these plans can be found in the section of this  document  entitled Pro Forma
Data, which appears on pages 24 to 30.

         In April 2003,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 149,  "Amendment  of Statement
133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities." This statement amends and
clarifies  accounting for derivative  instruments,  including certain derivative
instruments  embedded in other contracts,  and for hedging activities under SFAS
No. 133. The amendments set forth in SFAS No. 149 improve financial reporting by
requiring  that  contracts  with  comparable  characteristics  be accounted  for
similarly.  In particular,  this statement  clarifies under what circumstances a
contract with an initial net investment meets the characteristic of a derivative
as  discussed  in SFAS No. 133. In  addition,  it  clarifies  when a  derivative
contains a financing  component that warrants special reporting in the statement
of cash flows. SFAS No. 149 amends certain other existing pronouncements.  Those
changes  will  result  in  more  consistent  reporting  of  contracts  that  are
derivatives in their entirety or that contain embedded  derivatives that warrant
separate  accounting.  This statement is effective for contracts entered into or
modified  after  September 30, 2003,  and for hedging  relationships  designated
after  September 30, 2003.  The guidance  should be applied  prospectively.  The
provisions  of this  statement  that  relate  to SFAS No.  133,  "Implementation
Issues,"  that have been  effective  for fiscal  quarters  that  began  prior to
September  15,  2003,  should  continue to be applied in  accordance  with their
respective effective dates. In addition,  certain provisions relating to forward
purchases or sales of when-issued securities or other securities that do not yet
exist should be applied to existing  contracts as well as new contracts  entered
into after  September  30, 2003.  The adoption of this  statement did not have a
material effect on our financial position or results of operations.

         In May 2003,  the FASB  issued SFAS No.  150,  "Accounting  for Certain
Financial Instruments with Characteristics of Both Liabilities and Equity." This
statement  establishes  standards  for how an  issuer  classifies  and  measures
certain  financial  instruments  with  characteristics  of both  liabilities and
equity.  It  requires  that an issuer  classify a financial  instrument  that is
within  its  scope as a  liability  (or an asset  in some  circumstances).  Such
instruments  may have been  previously  classified as equity.  This statement is
effective for financial instruments entered into or modified after May 31, 2003,
and  otherwise  is  effective  at the  beginning  of the  first  interim  period
beginning  after September 15, 2003. The adoption of this statement did not have
a material effect on our reported equity.

         In November 2002, the FASB issued  Interpretation No. 45,  "Guarantor's
Accounting  and  Disclosure  Requirements  for  Guarantees,  Including  Indirect
Guarantees of  Indebtedness  of Others." This  interpretation  elaborates on the
disclosures  to be made by a  guarantor  in its  interim  and  annual  financial
statements  about its obligations  under certain  guarantees that it has issued.
This  interpretation  clarifies  that a guarantor is required to  disclose:  the
nature of the guarantee,  including the approximate  term of the guarantee,  how
the  guarantee  arose,  and the events or  circumstances  that would require the
guarantor to perform under the guarantee; the maximum potential amount of future
payments under the guarantee;  the carrying amount of the liability, if any, for
the guarantor's  obligations  under the guarantee;  and the nature and extent of
any recourse provisions or available  collateral that would enable the guarantor
to recover the

                                       62



amounts paid under the  guarantee.  This  interpretation  also  clarifies that a
guarantor is required to recognize, at the inception of a guarantee, a liability
for the  obligations it has  undertaken in issuing the guarantee,  including its
ongoing  obligation  to stand ready to perform over the term of the guarantee in
the  event  that the  specified  triggering  events  or  conditions  occur.  The
objective of the initial  measurement of that liability is the fair value of the
guarantee at its  inception.  The initial  recognition  and initial  measurement
provisions of this  interpretation  are  applicable  on a  prospective  basis to
guarantees  issued or modified  after  December  31, 2002,  irrespective  of the
guarantor's fiscal year-end. The disclosure  requirements in this interpretation
are effective for financial statements of interim or annual periods ending after
December 15, 2002. The adoption of this  interpretation  did not have a material
effect on our financial position or results of operations.

         In December  2003,  the FASB issued a revision  to  Interpretation  46,
"Consolidation of Variable Interest  Entities," which established  standards for
identifying a variable  interest entity ("VIE") and for  determining  under what
circumstances  a VIE  should  be  consolidated  with  its  primary  beneficiary.
Application of this Interpretation is required in financial statements of public
entities  that have  interests in  special-purpose  entities for periods  ending
after  December  15,  2003.  Application  by public  entities,  other than small
business  issuers,  for  all  other  types  of  VIEs is  required  in  financial
statements for periods ending after March 15, 2004.  Small business issuers must
apply  this  Interpretation  to all other  types of VIEs at the end of the first
reporting   period  ending  after  December  15,  2004.  The  adoption  of  this
Interpretation  has not had and is not expected to have a material effect on our
financial position or results of operations.

                             BUSINESS OF KEARNY MHC

         Kearny  MHC is a federal  mutual  holding  company  and is  subject  to
regulation by the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  Kearny MHC currently owns 100%
of the outstanding  common stock of Kearny Financial Corp. So long as Kearny MHC
is in existence,  it will at all times own a majority of the outstanding  common
stock of Kearny Financial Corp.

         The primary business activity of Kearny MHC going forward will continue
to be owning a majority of Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s common stock.  Kearny MHC,
however,  is  authorized  to engage in any other  business  activities  that are
permissible for mutual holding companies under federal law, including  investing
in loans and  securities.  Kearny MHC does not maintain  offices  separate  from
those of Kearny Federal Savings Bank or employ any persons other than certain of
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's  officers.  Officers  of  Kearny  MHC  are  not
separately compensated for their service.

                       BUSINESS OF KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP.

         Kearny  Financial Corp. is a federal mutual holding company  subsidiary
and is  subject  to  regulation  by the  Office  of Thrift  Supervision.  It was
organized for the purpose of being a holding  company for Kearny Federal Savings
Bank.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s primary  activity is and will continue to be
holding all of the stock of Kearny Federal Savings Bank.  Kearny Financial Corp.
intends  to invest  the  proceeds  of the  offering  as  discussed  under Use of
Proceeds on page 21. Kearny  Financial Corp. does not maintain  offices separate
from  those of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank or employ any  persons  other than
certain of Kearny Federal Savings Bank's officers.  Officers of Kearny Financial
Corp. are not separately compensated for their service.

                                       63



                     BUSINESS OF KEARNY FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK

General

         Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank is a  federally-chartered  stock  savings
bank. We were  originally  founded in 1884 as a New Jersey  mutual  building and
loan  association  under the name  "Kearny  Building and Loan  Association."  We
obtained federal  insurance of accounts in 1939 and received our federal charter
in 1941. We changed our name from Kearny Federal Savings and Loan Association to
Kearny Federal Savings Bank in 1995.  Kearny Federal Savings Bank's deposits are
federally insured by the Savings  Association  Insurance Fund as administered by
the Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation.  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank is
regulated by the Office of Thrift  Supervision and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.

         Our primary  business is  attracting  retail  deposits from the general
public and using those deposits,  together with funds generated from operations,
principal  repayments  on  securities  and loans  and  borrowed  funds,  for our
investing and lending activities. We invest in mortgage-backed  securities, U.S.
government  obligations,  obligations  of state and political  subdivisions  and
other securities. Our loan portfolio consists of one- to four-family residential
mortgage loans,  multi-family and commercial mortgage loans, construction loans,
commercial  business  loans,  home equity  loans and lines of credit,  and other
consumer loans. Our interest-earning assets consist primarily of mortgage-backed
securities and investment securities,  which comprised 63.6% of our total assets
while our loan  portfolio  comprised  27.1% of our total assets at September 30,
2004.  We intend to increase the balance of our loan  portfolio  relative to the
size of our securities portfolio,  however, such a change will take time and, in
the near future, our assets will continue to consist primarily of securities.

         Market Area. We currently  operate from our main office in Kearny,  New
Jersey,  and  twenty-four  branch offices  located in Bergen,  Hudson,  Passaic,
Morris, Middlesex, Essex, Union and Ocean Counties, New Jersey. We also consider
Monmouth County, New Jersey to be part of our market area.

         Our  lending  is  concentrated  in the nine New Jersey  counties  named
above, and our predominant  sources of deposits are the communities in which our
offices are located as well as the neighboring communities.

         Our primary  market  area is largely  urban and  suburban  with a broad
economic  base as is typical with  counties in the New York  metropolitan  area.
Service   jobs   represent   the   largest   employment   sector   followed   by
wholesale/retail trade.  Unemployment rates in our primary market area counties,
as of June 2004, ranged from a low of 3.4% to a high of 6.8% compared to the New
Jersey statewide average of 4.7%. Essex, Hudson,  Passaic and Union counties had
unemployment rates above the statewide measure and Bergen, Middlesex, Morris and
Ocean  counties had  unemployment  rates below the  statewide  measure.  Morris,
Bergen,   Middlesex  and  Union  counties  had  median   household   incomes  of
approximately $87,000, $74,000, $68,000 and $62,000,  respectively,  compared to
the New  Jersey  median of  $61,000,  while  Essex,  Hudson,  Ocean and  Passaic
counties had median household incomes ranging from $44,000 to $54,000.

         Our  business of  attracting  deposits  and making  loans is  primarily
conducted  within our market area. A downturn in the local  economy could reduce
the amount of funds  available for deposit and the ability of borrowers to repay
their loans. As a result, our profitability could decrease.

                                       64



         Competition.  We operate in a market area with a high  concentration of
banking and  financial  institutions,  and we face  substantial  competition  in
attracting  deposits and in originating  loans. A number of our  competitors are
significantly   larger   institutions  with  greater  financial  and  managerial
resources  and  lending  limits.  Our  ability  to  compete  successfully  is  a
significant factor affecting our growth potential and profitability.

         Our competition for deposits and loans historically has come from other
insured  financial  institutions  such as local and regional  commercial  banks,
savings  institutions,  and credit unions located in our primary market area. We
also compete with mortgage  banking and finance  companies for real estate loans
and with commercial  banks and savings  institutions  for consumer loans, and we
face  competition  for funds  from  investment  products  such as mutual  funds,
short-term money funds and corporate and government securities. Based on Federal
Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  data as of June  30,  2004  (the  most  current
available information),  our deposit market share in New Jersey was only 0.7% at
June 30, 2004, a reduction from 0.8% at June 30, 2003,  and the largest  deposit
share  in any  county  in which we have  branches  was 2.5% at June 30,  2004 in
Bergen  County,  down from 2.8% at June 30,  2003.  There are large  competitors
operating throughout our total market area, including Bank of America,  Commerce
Bank, Wachovia Bank and PNC Bank, and we also face strong competition from other
community-based financial institutions.

Lending Activities

         General.  We have  traditionally  focused on the origination of one- to
four-family  loans,  which  comprise a  significant  majority  of the total loan
portfolio.  We also  provide  financing  on  multi-family  dwellings,  mixed-use
properties  and other  commercial  real  estate.  Consumer  lending  is our next
largest category of lending,  primarily  composed of home equity loans and lines
of credit. We also originate  construction loans and commercial  business loans,
generally secured by real estate.

                                       65



         Loan   Portfolio   Composition.   The  following   table  analyzes  the
composition of our loan portfolio by loan category at the dates indicated.




                      At September 30,                                            At June 30,                     
                      -----------------    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            2004                 2004              2003              2002             2001              2000
                      -----------------    ----------------   -----------------------------------   --------------   ---------------
                      Amount    Percent    Amount   Percent   Amount  Percent   Amount    Percent   Amount Percent   Amount  Percent
                      ------    -------    ------   -------   ------  -------   ------    -------   ------ -------   ------  -------
                                                                                (In thousands)
Type of Loans:
--------------
                                                                                           

Real estate mortgage -
   one-to-four family. $370,883   71.37% $358,241    70.22% $366,391    71.50% $458,969    77.24% $468,846   77.42% $464,999  78.07%
Real estate mortgage -
  multi-family and                                                                                                            
  commercial..........   82,945   15.96    83,426    16.35    71,099    13.88    59,418    10.00    57,013    9.42    50,536   8.48
Commercial business...    3,877    0.75     5,161     1.01     2,353     0.46     6,704     1.13     4,325    0.71       537   0.09
Consumer:
   Home equity loans..   38,494    7.41    37,381     7.33    37,315     7.28    36,750     6.19    39,492    6.52    34,840   5.85
   Home equity lines                                                                                                              
     of credit........   15,615    3.00    15,677     3.07    19,905     3.89    19,183     3.23    12,641    2.09    10,340   1.74
   Passbook or 
     certificate......    2,667    0.51     2,746     0.54     2,895     0.56     3,044     0.51     3,539    0.59     3,456   0.58
   Other..............      319    0.06       336     0.07     1,273     0.25     1,111     0.18     1,405    0.23     1,787   0.30
Construction..........    4,881    0.94     7,212     1.41    11,183     2.18     9,030     1.52    18,299    3.02    29,125   4.89
                       -------- -------  --------   ------- --------  -------  --------   ------  --------  ------  -------- ------ 
     Total loans......  519,681  100.00%  510,180   100.00%  512,414   100.00%  594,209   100.00%  605,560  100.00%  595,620 100.00%
                       -------- =======  --------   ======  --------  =======  --------   ======  --------  ======  -------- ======
Less:
   Allowance for loan
      losses..........    5,290             5,144              5,180              5,170              5,167             5,093
   Deferred loan (costs)
      and fees, net...     (805)             (758)            (1,927)            (2,103)            (1,789)           (1,423)
                       --------          --------           --------           --------           --------          --------
                          4,485             4,386              3,253              3,067              3,378             3,670
                       --------          --------           --------           --------           --------          --------
     Total loans, net. $515,196          $505,794           $509,161           $591,142           $602,182          $591,950
                       ========          ========           ========           ========           ========          ========



                                       66



         Loan Maturity Schedule.  The following tables set forth the maturity of
our loan portfolio at September 30, 2004 and June 30, 2004, respectively. Demand
loans,  loans having no stated maturity,  and overdrafts are shown as due in one
year or less. Loans are stated in the following  tables at contractual  maturity
and actual maturities could differ due to prepayments.





                                                            At September 30, 2004                                       
                   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Real estate      Real estate                             Home
                     mortgage         mortgage -                Home      equity     Passbook
                   one-to-four    multi-family   Commercial   equity     lines of       or
                     family       and commercial   business    loans      credit   certificate    Other   Construction   Total
                   ---------     --------------  -----------  ------     --------  ------------   -----   -------------  -----
                                                                      (In thousands)
                                                                                                
Amounts Due:
Within 1 Year......  $    245       $ 1,390      $3,763     $   111     $   245       $2,232       $136       $4,881    $ 13,003
                     --------       -------      ------     -------     -------       ------       ----       ------    --------

After 1 year:
  1 to 3 years.....     3,601           755          70       4,586         303          386         72            -       9,773
  3 to 5 years.....     6,824         4,706          44       3,034         648           15         14            -      15,285
  5 to 10 years....    46,461        10,762           -      12,339         892           15          -            -      70,469
  10 to 15 years...   135,101        25,099           -      17,567       6,492           19          -            -     184,278
  Over 15 years....   178,651        40,233           -         857       7,035            -         97            -     226,873
                     --------       -------      ------     -------     -------       ------       ----       ------    --------

Total due after 
  one year.........   370,638        81,555         114      38,383      15,370          435        183            -     506,678
                     --------       -------      ------     -------     -------       ------       ----       ------    --------
Total amount due...  $370,883       $82,945      $3,877     $38,494     $15,615       $2,667       $319       $4,881    $519,681
                     ========       =======      ======     =======     =======       ======       ====       ======    ========







                                                                 At June 30, 2004                                        
                   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Real estate      Real estate                             Home
                     mortgage         mortgage -                Home      equity     Passbook
                   one-to-four    multi-family   Commercial   equity     lines of       or
                     family       and commercial   business    loans      credit   certificate    Other   Construction   Total
                   ---------     --------------  -----------  ------     --------  ------------   -----   -------------  -----
                                                                  (In thousands)

                                                                                               
Amounts Due:
Within 1 Year......  $    256       $ 1,156     $ 5,041    $     67     $   358       $2,486      $ 133       $7,212     $16,709
                     --------       -------      ------     -------     -------       ------       ----       ------    --------

After 1 year:
  1 to 3 years.....     1,242           842          75       1,064         158          124         67            -       3,572
  3 to 5 years.....     6,280           999           -       5,566         155           94         38            -      13,132
  5 to 10 years....    40,770        11,002          45      10,328         972            -          -            -      63,117
  10 to 15 years...   129,883        24,663           -      16,912       5,708           42          -            -     177,208
  Over 15 years....   179,810        44,764           -       3,444       8,326            -         98            -     236,442
                     --------       -------      ------     -------     -------       ------       ----       ------    --------

Total due after 
  one year.........   357,985        82,270         120      37,314      15,319          260        203            -     493,471
                     --------       -------      ------     -------     -------       ------       ----       ------    --------

Total amount due...  $358,241       $83,426      $5,161     $37,381     $15,677       $2,746       $336       $7,212    $510,180
                     ========       =======      ======     =======     =======       ======       ====       ======    ========



                                       67


         The  following  table  sets  forth  the  dollar  amount of all loans at
September 30, 2004 that are due after September 30, 2005.


                                                  Floating or
                                   Fixed Rates  Adjustable Rates         Total
                                   -----------  ----------------         -----
                                                (In thousands)
Real estate mortgage -
  one-to-four family............      $336,929        $33,709         $370,638
Real estate mortgage -                  53,299         28,256           81,555
  multi-family and commercial...
Commercial business.............           100             14              114
Consumer:
   Home equity loans............        38,383              -           38,383
   Home equity lines of credit..         1,305         14,065           15,370
   Passbook or certificate......             -            435              435
   Other........................           172             11              183
   Construction.................             -              -                -
                                      --------        -------         --------
       Total....................      $430,188        $76,490         $506,678
                                      ========        =======         ========


         The  following  table sets forth the dollar amount of all loans at June
30, 2004 that are due after June 30, 2005.


                                                   Floating or
                                    Fixed Rates  Adjustable Rates        Total
                                    ------------ ---------------         -----
                                                 (In thousands)
Real estate mortgage -
  one-to-four family............      $313,757        $44,228         $357,985
Real estate mortgage -
  multi-family and commercial...        45,667         36,603           82,270
Commercial business.............           105             15              120
Consumer:
   Home equity loans............        37,314              -           37,314
   Home equity lines of credit..         1,093         14,226           15,319
   Passbook or certificate......             -            260              260
   Other........................           190             13              203
   Construction.................             -              -                -
                                      --------        -------         --------
       Total....................      $398,126        $95,345         $493,471
                                      ========        =======         ========


         One- to  Four-Family  Mortgage  Loans.  Our  primary  lending  activity
consists of the origination of one- to four-family first mortgage loans,  nearly
all of which are secured by property located in New Jersey.

         We will  originate  a one- to  four-family  mortgage  loan on an  owner
occupied  property  with  principal  amounts  up to  95% of  the  lesser  of the
appraised  value or the purchase  price of the property,  with private  mortgage
insurance  required for loans with a loan to value ratio exceeding 80%. The loan
to value  limit on a  non-owner  occupied  property  is 75%.  Loans in excess of
$750,000  are  handled on a case by case basis and are  subject to lower loan to
value limits, generally no more than 50%.

                                       68


         Our fixed rate and adjustable rate residential  mortgage loans on owner
occupied  properties  have terms of ten to thirty  years.  Residential  mortgage
loans on non-owner occupied  properties have terms up to fifteen years for fixed
rate loans and terms up to twenty years for adjustable rate loans. We also offer
ten-year  balloon  mortgages with a thirty year  amortization  schedule on owner
occupied  properties  and a  twenty  year  amortization  schedule  on  non-owner
occupied properties.

         Our adjustable rate loan products  provide for an interest rate that is
tied to the one-year  Constant Maturity U.S. Treasury index and have terms of up
to thirty years with initial fixed rate periods of one, three,  five,  seven, or
ten  years  according  to the  terms  of the  loan and  annual  rate  adjustment
thereafter. We also offer an adjustable rate loan with a term up to thirty years
with a rate that adjusts  every five years to the  five-year  Constant  Maturity
U.S. Treasury index.  There is a 200 basis point limit on the rate adjustment in
any adjustment  period,  and the rate adjustment limit over the life of the loan
is 600 basis points.  We emphasize  the  origination  of adjustable  rate loans,
however,  as a result of the low interest rate  environment  of the last several
years, customer demand has recently been primarily for fixed rate loans.

         We offer a first  time home  buyer  program  for  persons  who have not
previously  owned real estate and are purchasing a one- to four-family  property
in Bergen, Passaic, Morris, Essex, Hudson, Middlesex,  Monmouth, Ocean and Union
Counties,  New  Jersey  for use as a primary  residence.  This  program  is also
available  outside these areas only to persons who are existing  deposit or loan
customers  of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank and/or  members of their  immediate
families.  The financial incentives offered under this program are a one-quarter
of one percent rate reduction on all first mortgage loan types and the refund of
the application fee at closing.

         The fixed rate  mortgage  loans that we  originate  generally  meet the
secondary   mortgage  market   standards  of  the  Federal  Home  Loan  Mortgage
Corporation. However, as our focus is on growing the size of the loan portfolio,
we  generally  do not sell loans in the  secondary  market and do not  currently
anticipate that we will commence doing so in any large  capacity.  There were no
residential mortgage loan sales during the last three fiscal years.

         Substantially  all of our residential  mortgages  include "due on sale"
clauses,  which are provisions giving us the right to declare a loan immediately
payable if the borrower sells or otherwise transfers an interest in the property
to a third  party.  Property  appraisals  on real  estate  securing  our one- to
four-family   residential   loans  are  made  by  state  certified  or  licensed
independent  appraisers  approved  by the  Board of  Directors.  Appraisals  are
performed in accordance  with applicable  regulations  and policies.  We require
title  insurance  policies on all first  mortgage real estate loans  originated.
Homeowners,  liability,  fire and, if applicable,  flood insurance  policies are
also required.

         Multi-family  and  Commercial  Real  Estate  Mortgage  Loans.  We  also
originate  mortgage loans on multi-family and commercial real estate properties,
including loans on apartment  buildings,  retail/service  properties,  and other
income-producing   properties,    including   mixed-use   properties   combining
residential and commercial space. Going forward,  we intend to increase the size
of this portfolio.

         We generally require no less than a 30% down payment or equity position
for mortgage loans on multi-family and commercial real estate properties, and we
require personal guarantees on all such loans.  Currently,  these loans are made
with a maturity of up to 15 years. We also offer a five year balloon loan with a
twenty year amortization  schedule.  All of our multi-family and commercial real
estate mortgage loans are on properties within New Jersey.

                                       69



         Multi-family  and commercial  real estate  mortgage loans generally are
considered to entail significantly greater risk than that which is involved with
one- to four-family real estate lending.  The repayment of these loans typically
is dependent on the successful  operations and income stream of the borrower and
the  real  estate   securing  the  loan  as  collateral.   These  risks  can  be
significantly  affected by economic  conditions.  In addition,  multi-family and
commercial  real estate mortgage loans generally carry larger balances to single
borrowers or related groups of borrowers than one- to four-family loans.  Multi-
family and commercial real estate lending also generally requires  substantially
greater  evaluation and oversight  efforts  compared to residential  real estate
lending.

         Commercial Business Loans. We also originate  commercial term loans and
lines of credit to a variety of professionals,  sole  proprietorships  and small
businesses in our market area. These loans are generally secured by real estate,
and  we  require  personal  guarantees  on  all  commercial  loans.   Marketable
securities  are also accepted as collateral on lines of credit,  but with a loan
to value limit of 50%.  The loan to value limit on secured  commercial  lines of
credit  and term  loans is  otherwise  generally  limited  to 70%.  We also make
unsecured commercial loans in the form of overdraft checking authorization up to
$25,000 and unsecured lines of credit up to $25,000.

         Our commercial  term loans generally have terms up to fifteen years and
are mostly fixed rate loans. Our commercial lines of credit have terms up to two
years and are mostly  adjustable rate loans.  We also offer a one-year  interest
only commercial line of credit with balloon payment.

         Unlike  single-family  residential  mortgage loans, which generally are
made on the basis of the  borrower's  ability to make  repayment from his or her
employment  and other income and which are secured by real property  whose value
tends to be more easily  ascertainable,  commercial business loans typically are
made on the basis of the borrower's ability to make repayment from the cash flow
of the  borrower's  business.  As a result,  the  availability  of funds for the
repayment of commercial  business  loans may be  substantially  dependent on the
success of the business itself and the general economic environment.  Commercial
business loans,  therefore,  have greater credit risk than residential  mortgage
loans. In addition,  commercial  loans generally carry larger balances to single
borrowers  or  related  groups  of  borrowers  than one- to  four-family  loans.
Commercial lending also generally requires  substantially greater evaluation and
oversight  efforts  compared  to  residential  or  non-residential  real  estate
lending.

         Home Equity Loans and Lines of Credit.  Our home equity loans are fixed
rate loans for terms of generally up to fifteen  years.  We also offer fixed and
adjustable  rate home equity lines of credit with terms up to fifteen years.  We
still have in this  portfolio a substantial  amount of  twenty-year  home equity
loans originated by Pulaski Savings Bank, which we acquired in 2002.  Collateral
value is determined through a property value analysis report (FHLMC Form 704) by
a state  certified or licensed  independent  appraiser,  and in some cases, by a
full appraisal performed by a state certified or licensed independent appraiser.
Home equity  loans and lines of credit do not  require  title  insurance  but do
require homeowner, liability, fire and, if applicable, flood insurance policies.

         Home  equity  loans and  fixed  rate home  equity  lines of credit  are
primarily  originated in our market area and are generally made in amounts of up
to 80% of value on term loans and up to 75% of value on home  equity  adjustable
rate lines of credit.  We originate  home equity loans secured by either a first
lien or a second lien on the property.

         Other  Consumer  Loans.  In addition to home equity  loans and lines of
credit,  our consumer loan portfolio at September 30, 2004 also included savings
secured  (passbook)  loans  and  unsecured  personal  overdraft  loans.  We will
generally lend up to 90% of the account balance on a savings secured loan.

                                       70



         Consumer loans entail greater risks than  residential  mortgage  loans,
particularly  consumer  loans that are  unsecured.  Consumer  loan  repayment is
dependent on the borrower's continuing financial stability and is more likely to
be adversely affected by job loss, divorce, illness or personal bankruptcy.  The
application of various federal laws,  including federal and state bankruptcy and
insolvency  laws,  may limit the amount which can be recovered on consumer loans
in the event of a default.

         Our  underwriting  standards for consumer loans include a determination
of the applicant's  credit history and an assessment of the applicant's  ability
to meet existing obligations and payments on the proposed loan. The stability of
the  applicant's  monthly  income may be  determined  by  verification  of gross
monthly income from primary employment and any additional  verifiable  secondary
income.

         We previously made student  education  loans. We sold this portfolio to
Sallie  Mae  during  the  year  ended  June  30,  2003.  Additionally,   in  our
acquisitions  of Pulaski  Savings  Bank and West Essex Bank,  we acquired  small
portfolios of automobile loans and personal overdraft  accounts.  The balance of
automobile  loans and unsecured  personal loans  remaining at September 30, 2004
was  $31,000 and  $132,000,  respectively.  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank began
offering  unsecured personal overdraft loans of up to $2,500 to its customers in
September 2004.

         Construction  Lending.  Our  construction  lending  includes  loans  to
individuals  for  construction  of one- to  four-family  residences or for major
renovations or improvements to an existing  dwelling.  Our construction  lending
also  includes  loans to builders and  developers  for  multi-unit  buildings or
multi-house projects. All of our construction lending is in New Jersey.

         Construction  borrowers  must hold  title to the land free and clear of
any liens. Financing for construction loans is limited to 80% of the anticipated
appraised value of the completed property.  Disbursements are made in accordance
with inspection  reports by our approved appraisal firms. Terms of financing are
limited to one year with an interest rate tied to the prime rate and may include
a premium of one or more points.  In some cases, we convert a construction  loan
to a permanent mortgage loan upon completion of construction.

         We have no formal  limits as to the number of  projects  a builder  has
under  construction or  development,  and make a case by case  determination  on
loans to builders and developers who have multiple  projects under  development.
Loans to builders  and  developers  must be  approved by the Board of  Directors
before the  borrower's  application  can be  accepted.  We generally do not make
construction  loans to builders on a  speculative  basis,  without a contract in
place.  Financing  is  only  provided  for  up to  two  houses  at a  time  in a
multi-house  project,  requiring  a  contract  on one of the two  houses  before
financing for the next house may be obtained.

         Construction lending is generally considered to involve a higher degree
of credit risk than  mortgage  lending.  If the  estimate of  construction  cost
proves to be  inaccurate,  we may be  compelled to advance  additional  funds to
complete the construction with repayment  dependent,  in part, on the success of
the ultimate project rather than the ability of a borrower or guarantor to repay
the loan. If we are forced to foreclose on a project prior to completion,  there
is no assurance that we will be able to recover all of the unpaid portion of the
loan. In addition,  we may be required to fund additional  amounts to complete a
project and may have to hold the property for an indeterminate period of time.

         Loans to One Borrower.  Under federal law, savings  institutions  have,
subject to certain exemptions, lending limits to one borrower in an amount equal
to the greater of $500,000 or 15% of the

                                       71



institution's unimpaired capital and surplus.  Accordingly,  as of September 30,
2004, our loans to one borrower limit was approximately $32.0 million.

         At September  30, 2004,  our largest  single  borrower had an aggregate
loan balance of  approximately  $9.8 million,  representing  two mortgage  loans
secured by commercial real estate, one commercial line of credit secured by real
estate,  and one  residential  mortgage loan. Our second largest single borrower
had an aggregate loan balance of approximately $6.4 million,  representing three
loans  secured  by  commercial  real  estate and one  commercial  line of credit
secured by real estate. Our third largest borrower had an aggregate loan balance
of approximately $4.0 million, representing two loans secured by commercial real
estate. At September 30, 2004, all of these lending  relationships  were current
and performing in accordance with the terms of their loan agreements.

         Loan Originations,  Purchases,  Sales, Solicitation and Processing. The
following  table shows total loans  originated,  purchased and repaid during the
periods indicated. During the periods indicated, we did not sell any loans other
than the sale of the student loan  portfolio to Sallie Mae during the year ended
June 30, 2003.



                                                             For the Three
                                                             Months Ended
                                                             September 30,                 For the Year Ended June 30,
                                                             -------------                 ---------------------------
                                                          2004          2003           2004          2003            2002
                                                          ----          ----           ----          ----            ----
                                                                                  (In thousands)
                                                                                                              
Loan originations and purchases:
  Loan originations:
    Real estate mortgage - one-to-four family......     $27,778        $19,903       $ 69,550      $ 87,545        $119,373
    Real estate mortgage - 
      multi-family and commercial..................         924         13,567         26,052        17,227          14,564
    Commercial business............................         145          1,436          5,631         1,714           3,700
    Construction...................................       1,040          1,943          6,864         7,662          11,631
  Consumer:
    Home equity loans and lines of credit..........       7,122          6,894         31,656        45,328          35,165
    Passbook or certificate........................         437            435          1,830         2,693           3,186
    Other..........................................          68             64            266           101              89
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
  Total loan originations..........................      37,514         44,242        141,849       162,270         187,708
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
  Loan purchases:
    Real estate mortgage - one-to-four family......           -              -         14,262             -           5,328
    Real estate mortgage - 
      multi-family and commercial..................           -            407            762         5,687           4,256
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
  Total loan purchases.............................           -            407         15,024         5,687           9,584
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
  Loans sold (student loan portfolio)..............           -              -              -          (338)              -
  Loan principal repayments........................     (28,659)       (60,363)      (157,906)     (249,414)       (208,643)
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
  Total loans sold and principal repayments........     (28,659)       (60,363)      (157,906)     (249,752)       (208,643)
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
Increase (decrease) due to other items.............         547         (2,589)        (2,334)         (186)            311
                                                       --------       --------       --------      --------        --------  
Net (decrease) in loan portfolio...................    $  9,402       $(18,303)      $ (3,367)     $(81,981)       $(11,040)
                                                       ========       ========       ========      ========        ======== 


         Our customary  sources of loan  applications  include repeat customers,
referrals from realtors and other  professionals  and "walk-in"  customers.  Our
residential loan originations are largely  advertising driven. On the commercial
lending side,  we have  recently  hired four  experienced  business  development
officers  who focus on  commercial  loan  originations  and we expect to further
increase staffing in this area.

                                       72



         We primarily  originate our own loans and retain them in our portfolio.
As part of our loan  growth  strategy,  we  generally  do not sell  loans in the
secondary market and do not currently  anticipate that we will commence doing so
in any large  capacity.  There were no whole loan sales  during the three  years
ended June 30, 2004 other than the sale of the  student  loan  portfolio.  Gross
loan  originations  totaled  $141.8  million  for the year ended June 30,  2004.
Principal  repayments  exceeded loan originations by approximately $16.1 million
for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2004.

         During the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002, we purchased $14.3
million, $0 and $5.3 million of one- to four-family  mortgage loans,  consisting
mostly of fifteen  and twenty year fixed rate loans with  servicing  retained by
the seller.  These loans were  purchased  with recourse for a limited  period of
time. In  accordance  with the terms of the loan  purchase  agreements  for loan
purchases  in the years ended June 30, 2004 and 2003,  any loan  purchased  that
became delinquent for a period of 60 days within six months from the date of the
purchase of the loan was  permitted  to be returned  to and  repurchased  by the
selling bank with a refund to Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank of the  unamortized
portion of the  premium  paid for that  loan.  As of  September  30,  2004,  the
recourse period has expired for these loan purchases.

         We will  continue  to  actively  consider  the  purchase  of  loans  as
opportunities  present themselves.  Additionally,  we have in the past purchased
first  mortgage  loans on a forward  commitment  basis from a New Jersey located
mortgage  broker and may in the future  enter into such  arrangements  with such
broker or with other parties on a forward commitment basis.

         In  addition  to  purchasing   one-  to  four-family   loans,  we  also
occasionally purchase participations in loans originated by other banks and also
through the Thrift Institutions  Community Investment  Corporation of New Jersey
("TICIC").  At September  30, 2004,  our TICIC  participations  included  multi-
family and commercial  real estate  properties.  The aggregate  balance of TICIC
participations at September 30, 2004 was $9.8 million and the average balance on
a single participation was approximately $257,000. At September 30, 2004, we had
a total of five  non-TICIC  participations  with an  aggregate  balance  of $8.8
million,  consisting of loans on commercial real estate properties,  including a
medical  center,  a self  storage  facility,  a  shopping  plaza and  commercial
buildings with a combination of retail and office space.

         Loan Approval  Procedures and Authority.  Our lending policies and loan
approval limits are  recommended by senior  management and approved by the Board
of Directors.  Our Senior Vice President/Chief Lending Officer may approve loans
up to $500,000.  Assistant vice presidents of Kearny Federal Savings Bank in the
following  positions  may approve  loans as  follows:  mortgage  loan  managers,
mortgage  loans up to $250,000;  consumer loan  managers,  consumer  loans up to
$100,000;  and consumer  loan  underwriters,  consumer  loans up to $50,000.  In
addition to these principal amount limits,  there are established limits for the
different  levels of approval  authority as to minimum credit scores and maximum
loan to value ratios and debt ratios.  Members of the Loan Committee,  comprised
of four senior officers, our President and Chief Executive Officer,  Senior Vice
President/Chief  Financial Officer,  Senior Vice  President/Treasurer and Senior
Vice  President/Chief  Lending  Officer,  each have individual  authorization to
approve  loans up to $500,000.  Loans  between  $500,000  and  $750,000  must be
approved by at least two members of the Loan Committee.  Non-conforming mortgage
loans and loans over $750,000 require the approval of the Board of Directors.

Asset Quality

         Loan Delinquencies and Collection Procedures.  The borrower is notified
by both  mail  and  telephone  when a loan  is  thirty  days  past  due.  If the
delinquency  continues,  subsequent  efforts are made to contact the  delinquent
borrower and additional collection notices and letters are sent. When a loan is

                                       73



ninety days  delinquent,  it is our general  practice to refer it to an attorney
for  repossession  or foreclosure.  All reasonable  attempts are made to collect
from  borrowers  prior to  referral to an attorney  for  collection.  In certain
instances, we may modify the loan or grant a limited moratorium on loan payments
to enable the  borrower  to  reorganize  his or her  financial  affairs,  and we
attempt to work with the borrower to establish a repayment  schedule to cure the
delinquency.

         As to mortgage loans, if a foreclosure  action is taken and the loan is
not  reinstated,  paid in full or  refinanced,  the property is sold at judicial
sale at which we may be the buyer if there are no adequate offers to satisfy the
debt.  Any property  acquired as the result of foreclosure or by deed in lieu of
foreclosure  is  classified  as real estate  owned until it is sold or otherwise
disposed of. When real estate owned is acquired,  it is recorded at the lower of
the unpaid  principal  balance of the related loan or its fair market value less
estimated selling costs. The initial writedown of the property is charged to the
allowance for loan losses.  Adjustments  to the carrying value of the properties
that result from  subsequent  declines in value are charged to operations in the
period in which the declines  occur.  At September 30, 2004, we held real estate
owned totaling $209,000, consisting of two parcels of vacant land.

         Loans are  reviewed  on a regular  basis and are placed on  non-accrual
status when they are more than ninety days  delinquent,  with the exception of a
passbook  loan, the  outstanding  balance of which is collected from the related
passbook  account along with accrued interest and a penalty when the loan is 120
days delinquent.  Loans may be placed on a non-accrual status at any time if, in
the opinion of management,  the  collection of additional  interest is doubtful.
Interest  accrued and unpaid at the time a loan is placed on non-accrual  status
is charged against  interest income.  Subsequent  payments are either applied to
the outstanding  principal balance or recorded as interest income,  depending on
the  assessment  of the ultimate  collectibility  of the loan.  At September 30,
2004, we had approximately $2.5 million of loans that were held on a non-accrual
basis.

         Non-Performing   Assets.  The  following  table  provides   information
regarding our non-performing loans and other  non-performing  assets. As of each
of the dates  indicated,  we did not have any troubled debt  restructurings.  At
September 30, 2004,  the allowance  for loan losses  totaled $5.3 million,  non-
performing  loans  totaled $2.5  million,  and the ratio of  allowance  for loan
losses to non-performing loans was 213.65%.

                                       74






                                                         At
                                                    September 30,                                 At June 30,
                                                    -------------     -----------------------------------------------------------
                                                        2004            2004         2003          2002        2001         2000
                                                        ----           ------       ------        ------      ------       -----
                                                                              (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                                          
Loans accounted for on a non-accrual basis:
  Real estate mortgage - one-to-four family              $1,141          $771       $1,571        $1,152      $1,957       $2,255
  Real estate mortgage - multi-family and
     commercial..............................             1,121         1,414          621           897         454          627
  Commercial business........................                33            39            -             -           -            -
  Consumer:
     Home equity loans.......................                 -            65          178            91          92          119
     Home equity lines of credit.............                 -             -            -             -          13          158
     Other...................................                 -             -            -            21           -            -
  Construction...............................               158             -            -             -           -            -
                                                         ------        ------       ------        ------      ------       ------
      Total..................................             2,453         2,289        2,370         2,161       2,516        3,159
                                                         ------        ------       ------        ------      ------       ------
Accruing loans which are contractually 
      past due 90 days or more:
  Real estate mortgage - one-to-four family                   -             -          423           427           -            -
  Real estate mortgage - multi-family and                     -
     commercial..............................                               -            -           168         381            -
  Commercial business........................                 -             -           23            23           -            -
  Consumer:
     Home equity loans and lines of credit...                 -             -            -             1           -            1
     Passbook or certificate.................                19            39           98             -          49           68
     Other...................................                 4             -            2            39          55           46
  Construction...............................                 -             -            -           469         218            -
                                                         ------        ------       ------        ------      ------       ------
      Total..................................                23            39          546         1,127         703          115
                                                         ------        ------       ------        ------      ------       ------
Total non-performing loans...................            $2,476        $2,328       $2,916        $3,288      $3,219       $3,274
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======
Real estate owned............................            $  209        $  209       $  209        $  209      $  361       $  185
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======
Other non-performing assets..................            $    -        $    -       $    -        $    -      $    -       $    -
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======
Total non-performing assets..................            $2,685        $2,537       $3,125        $3,497      $3,580       $3,459
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======
Total non-performing loans to total loans....              0.48%         0.46%        0.57%         0.55%       0.53%        0.55%
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======
Total non-performing loans to total assets...              0.13%         0.12%        0.15%         0.17%       0.18%        0.19%
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======
Total non-performing assets to total assets..              0.14%         0.13%        0.16%         0.18%       0.20%        0.21%
                                                         ======        ======       ======        ======      ======       ======


         During the three months ended September 30, 2004, gross interest income
of $44,000  would have been  recorded on loans  accounted  for on a  non-accrual
basis if those loans had been current,  and $8,000 of interest on such loans was
included in income for the three months  ended  September  30, 2004.  During the
year ended June 30,  2004,  gross  interest  income of $177,000  would have been
recorded on loans  accounted for on a non-accrual  basis if those loans had been
current,  and  $118,000 of interest on such loans was included in income for the
year ended June 30, 2004.

         Classified  Assets.  Management,  in  compliance  with Office of Thrift
Supervision guidelines,  has instituted an internal loan review program, whereby
non-performing loans are classified as substandard,  doubtful or loss. It is our
policy  to  review  the  loan   portfolio,   in   accordance   with   regulatory
classification  procedures,  on at  least  a  quarterly  basis.  When a loan  is
classified as  substandard  or doubtful,  management is required to evaluate the
loan for impairment.  When management  classifies a portion of a loan as loss, a
reserve  equal to 100% of the loss amount is required to be  established  or the
loan is to be charged-off.

                                       75



         An asset is considered "substandard" if it is inadequately protected by
the paying capacity and net worth of the obligor or the collateral  pledged,  if
any.  Substandard assets include those characterized by the distinct possibility
that the insured  institution will sustain some loss if the deficiencies are not
corrected.  Assets classified as "doubtful" have all of the weaknesses  inherent
in  those  classified  substandard,  with  the  added  characteristic  that  the
weaknesses  present make  collection or liquidation in full highly  questionable
and  improbable,  on the basis of  currently  existing  facts,  conditions,  and
values.  Assets,  or  portions  thereof,  classified  as "loss"  are  considered
uncollectible  and of so little value that their  continuance  as assets without
the  establishment of a specific loss reserve is not warranted.  Assets which do
not currently expose the insured  institution to a sufficient  degree of risk to
warrant  classification in one of the  aforementioned  categories but which have
credit  deficiencies  or  potential  weaknesses  are  required to be  designated
"special mention" by management.

         Management's  classification  of assets is  reviewed  by the Board on a
regular  basis  and by the  regulatory  agencies  as part of  their  examination
process.  An independent  loan review firm performs a review of our  residential
and commercial loan portfolios,  and we downgrade our  classifications  to match
those of this reviewing firm if there is disagreement between our assessment and
the independent assessment.  The following table discloses our classification of
assets and  designation of certain loans as special  mention as of September 30,
2004. At September 30, 2004,  all of the classified  assets and special  mention
designated assets were loans, and approximately  36.3%, or $3.0 million,  of the
classified and special mention loans at such date were loans originated  through
the  Thrift  Institutions   Community  Investment   Corporation  of  New  Jersey
("TICIC").


                             At
                       September 30,                     At June 30,
                       -------------      ------------------------------------
                            2004              2004          2003         2002
                           ------             ----          ----         ----
                                                (In thousands)

Special Mention.....       $  521           $  734       $ 1,011      $ 1,688
Substandard.........        5,885            6,264         5,129        6,159
Doubtful............        1,915            1,149           590          586
Loss................            -                -             -            -
                           ------           ------        ------       ------
  Total.............       $8,321           $8,147        $6,730       $8,433
                           ======           ======        ======       ======

         At  September  30,  2004,  none of the  loans  classified  as  "special
mention" and approximately $1.8 million of loans classified as "substandard" are
included  under  non-performing  assets,  as shown in the  table on page 75.  At
September 30, 2004,  $483,000 of the loans classified as "doubtful" are included
under non-performing assets, as shown in the table on page 75.

         Allowance for Loan Losses. The allowance for loan losses is a valuation
account that reflects our  estimation of the losses in our loan portfolio to the
extent they are both  probable  and  reasonable  to estimate.  The  allowance is
maintained  through provisions for loan losses that are charged to income in the
period they are established. We charge losses on loans against the allowance for
loan  losses when we believe  the  collection  of loan  principal  is  unlikely.
Recoveries on loans previously charged-off are added back to the allowance.

         Management, in determining the allowance for loan losses, considers the
losses  inherent in the loan  portfolio  and changes in the nature and volume of
our  loan  activities,  along  with  general  economic  and real  estate  market
conditions. We utilize a two tier approach: (1) identification of impaired loans
and

                                       76



establishment of specific loss allowances on such loans;  and (2)  establishment
of general  valuation  allowances on the remainder of our loan portfolio by type
of loan.

         A loan evaluated for impairment is deemed to be impaired when, based on
current information and events, it is probable that we will be unable to collect
all amounts due according to the contractual  terms of the loan  agreement.  All
loans  identified as impaired are evaluated  independently.  We do not aggregate
such loans for  evaluation  purposes.  Payments  received on impaired  loans are
applied first to interest receivable and then to principal.

         We maintain a loan review system which allows for a periodic  review of
our loan portfolio and the early  identification  of potential  impaired  loans.
Such system takes into  consideration,  among other things,  delinquency status,
size of loan, type of collateral and financial condition of the borrower.  Large
groups of smaller balance homogeneous loans, such as residential real estate and
home equity and consumer loans,  are evaluated in the aggregate using historical
loss factors and current economic conditions.  Large balance and/or more complex
loans,  such as  multi-family  and commercial  real estate loans,  are evaluated
individually for impairment.

         Specific loan loss  allowances are  established  for  identified  loans
based  on a review  of such  information  and/or  appraisals  of the  underlying
collateral. General loan loss allowances are based upon a combination of factors
including,  but not limited to, actual loan loss experience,  composition of the
loan portfolio, current economic conditions and management's judgment.

         The   estimation  of  the  allowance  for  loan  losses  is  inherently
subjective as it requires  estimates and  assumptions  that are  susceptible  to
significant  revisions as more information becomes available or as future events
change.  Future  additions to the  allowance for loan losses may be necessary if
economic  and other  conditions  in the  future  differ  substantially  from the
current operating environment. In addition, the Office of Thrift Supervision, as
an integral part of its examination  process,  periodically reviews our loan and
foreclosed real estate  portfolios and the related allowance for loan losses and
valuation allowance for foreclosed real estate. The Office of Thrift Supervision
may  require  the  allowance  for loan  losses or the  valuation  allowance  for
foreclosed  real  estate to be  increased  based on its  review  of  information
available  at the time of the  examination,  which would  negatively  affect our
earnings.

                                       77



         The  following  table  sets  forth  information  with  respect  to  our
allowance for loan losses at the dates indicated.



                                        For the Three Months
                                         Ended September 30,                                   For the Year Ended June 30,      
                                        ---------------------          ----------------------------------------------------------
                                           2004           2003          2004           2003         2002        2001        2000
                                          ------         ------        ------         ------       ------      ------      -----
                                                                                 (In thousands)

                                                                                                          
Allowance balance 
   (at beginning of period)..........     $  5,144       $  5,180      $  5,180       $  5,170     $  5,167    $  5,093    $  5,353
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
Provision for loan losses............          151              -             -              -            3         162         102
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
Charge-offs:
  Real estate mortgage - 
     one-to-four family..............            -              -            12              -            -          96         273
  Commercial business................            5              -            24              -            -           -          89
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
      Total charge-offs..............            5              -            36              -            -          96         362
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
Recoveries:
  Real estate mortgage - 
   one-to-four family................            -              -             -             10            -           8           -
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
      Total recoveries...............            -              -             -             10            -           8           -
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
Net (charge-offs) recoveries.........           (5)             -           (36)            10            -         (88)       (362)
                                          --------       ---------     --------       --------     --------    --------    --------
Allowance balance (at end of period).     $  5,290       $  5,180      $  5,144       $  5,180     $  5,170    $  5,167    $  5,093
                                          ========       ========      ========       ========     ========    ========    ========

Total loans outstanding..............     $519,681       $494,261      $510,180       $512,414     $594,209    $605,560    $595,620
                                          ========       ========      ========       ========     ========    ========    ========
Average loans outstanding............     $510,730       $498,160      $499,510       $546,521     $603,131    $612,474    $568,212
                                          ========       ========      ========       ========     ========    ========    ========
Allowance for loan losses as a percent
   of total loans outstanding........         1.02%          1.05%         1.01%          1.01%        0.87%       0.85%       0.86%
                                          ========       ========      ========       ========     ========    ========    ========
Net loans charged off as a percent of
   average loans outstanding.........         0.00%          0.00%         0.01%          0.00%        0.00%       0.01%       0.06%
                                          ========       ========      ========       ========     ========    ========    ========
Allowance for loan losses
   to non-performing loans...........       213.65%        198.62%       220.96%        177.64%      157.24%     160.52%     155.56%
                                          ========       ========      ========       ========     ========    ========    ========


                                       78



         Allocation of Allowance for Loan Losses. The following table sets forth
the allocation of our allowance for loan losses by loan category and the percent
of  loans  in each  category  to  total  loans  receivable,  net,  at the  dates
indicated.  The  portion  of the loan  loss  allowance  allocated  to each  loan
category  does not  represent  the total  available  for future losses which may
occur  within  the loan  category  since the  total  loan  loss  allowance  is a
valuation reserve applicable to the entire loan portfolio.




                                   At                                 
                              September 30,                                         At June 30,
                         ------------------ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  2004             2004              2003             2002              2001             2000
                         ------------------ -------------------  ---------------- --------------  ----------------   --------------
                                  Percent             Percent           Percent          Percent           Percent          Percent
                                  of Loans           of Loans           of Loans         of Loans          of Loans         of Loans
                                  to Total           to Total           to Total         to Total          to Total         to Total
                          Amount   Loans    Amount     Loans   Amount    Loans   Amount   Loans    Amount   Loans    Amount  Loans
                          ------  -------   ------    -------  ------   -------  ------  -------   ------  -------   ------ ------
                                                (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                          
At end of period
   allocated to:
Real estate mortgage -
   one-to-four family... $1,497    71.37%  $1,422     70.22%   $1,980    71.50% $2,966    77.24%  $2,944    77.42%  $3,042   78.07%
Real estate mortgage -
   multi-family and
   commercial...........  3,517    15.96    3,358     16.35     2,198    13.88   1,184    10.00      725     9.42      871    8.48
Commercial business.....     39     0.75       57      1.01        59     0.46      70     1.13       78     0.71       60    0.09
Consumer:
  Home equity loans.....    115     7.41      131      7.33       214     7.28     188     6.19      207     6.52      295    5.85
  Home equity lines
     of credit..........     45     3.00       52      3.07       218     3.89     261     3.23      169     2.09      142    1.74
  Passbook or 
     certificate........      -     0.51        -      0.54         -     0.56       -     0.51        -     0.59        -    0.58
  Other.................      2     0.06        4      0.07        10     0.25      17     0.18       11     0.23       65    0.30
Construction............     75     0.94      120      1.41       501     2.18     484     1.52    1,033     3.02      618    4.89
                         ------   ------   ------    ------    ------   ------  ------   ------   ------   ------   ------  ------
     Total allowance.... $5,290   100.00%  $5,144    100.00%   $5,180   100.00% $5,170   100.00%  $5,167   100.00%  $5,093  100.00%
                         ======   ======   ======    ======    ======   ======  ======   ======   ======   ======   ======  ====== 


                                       79



Securities Portfolio

         General.   Our   deposits   have   traditionally   exceeded   our  loan
originations,  and we have invested these deposits  primarily in mortgage-backed
securities  and  investment  securities.   Our  mortgage-backed  securities  and
investment securities comprised 63.6% of our total assets at September 30, 2004.
We intend to increase the balance of our loan portfolio  relative to the size of
our securities portfolio,  however, such a change will take time and in the near
future, our assets will continue to be primarily in securities.

         Our investment policy, which is approved by the Board of Directors,  is
designed to foster  earnings and manage cash flows within prudent  interest rate
risk and credit risk guidelines.  Generally,  our investment policy is to invest
funds  in  various  categories  of  securities  and  maturities  based  upon our
liquidity  needs,  asset/liability  management  policies,   investment  quality,
marketability  and  performance  objectives.  Our President and Chief  Executive
Officer,  Senior  Vice  President  and Chief  Financial  Officer and Senior Vice
President, Treasurer and Chief Accounting Officer are designated by the Board of
Directors as the officers responsible for securities investment transactions and
all  transactions  require  the  approval  of at least  two of these  designated
officers.  The Interest Rate Risk Management  Committee,  currently  composed of
Directors  Hopkins,  Regan,  Aanensen,  Mazza and Parow,  with our  Senior  Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer  participating as a management liaison, is
responsible for the administration of the securities  portfolio.  This committee
meets  quarterly  to  review  the  securities  portfolio.  The  results  of  the
committee's  quarterly  review  are  reported  to the full  Board,  which  makes
adjustments  to the investment  policy and strategies as it considers  necessary
and appropriate.

         All of our securities  carry market risk insofar as increases in market
rates of interest may cause a decrease in their  market  value.  Investments  in
securities are made based on certain considerations,  which include the interest
rate, tax considerations, volatility, yield, settlement date and maturity of the
security,  our liquidity position,  and anticipated cash needs and sources.  The
effect that the proposed  security  would have on our credit and  interest  rate
risk and risk-based capital is also considered.

         Federally  chartered  savings  banks  have the  authority  to invest in
various types of liquid assets. The investments  authorized under the investment
policy approved by our Board of Directors include U.S. government and government
agency obligations, municipal securities (consisting of bank qualified municipal
bond obligations of state and local governments) and mortgage-backed  securities
of various  U.S.  government  agencies or  government-sponsored  entities.  On a
short-term  basis,  our investment  policy  authorizes  investment in securities
purchased under agreements to resell, federal funds, certificates of deposits of
insured banks and savings institutions and Federal Home Loan Bank term deposits.

         Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 115,  "Accounting for
Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities,"  requires that securities be
categorized as "held to maturity," "trading securities" or "available-for-sale,"
based on  management's  intent as to the ultimate  disposition of each security.
Statement No. 115 allows debt  securities to be classified as "held to maturity"
and reported in financial  statements  at amortized  cost only if the  reporting
entity has the positive intent and ability to hold these securities to maturity.
Securities  that might be sold in response to changes in market  interest rates,
changes in the security's  prepayment risk,  increases in loan demand,  or other
similar factors cannot be classified as "held to maturity."

         We do not currently use or maintain a trading  account.  Securities not
classified as "held to maturity" are classified as  "available-for-sale."  These
securities are reported at fair value,  and  unrealized  gains and losses on the
securities are excluded from earnings and reported,  net of deferred taxes, as a
separate component of equity.

                                       80



         At  September  30,  2004,  our  mortgage-backed   securities  portfolio
included securities issued by the Government National Mortgage Association,  the
Federal  Home  Loan  Mortgage  Corporation  and the  Federal  National  Mortgage
Association,  and our investment  securities  portfolio included U.S. government
obligations and obligations of states and political subdivisions.

         At September 30, 2004, we also held the following securities: shares of
common stock of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation with a carrying value
of $16.4 million;  mutual fund shares issued by Dryden  Government  Income Fund,
Inc. and AMF Adjustable  Mortgage Rate Fund with an aggregate  carrying value of
$14.0 million;  and trust preferred  securities with an aggregate carrying value
of $10.9  million.  Currently,  our policy  does not permit new  investments  in
corporate equity  securities beyond what we currently hold, and we do not invest
in mortgage-related  securities of private corporate issuers that are not issued
by U.S. government agencies or government-sponsored entities.

         At   September   30,   2004   our   securities    portfolio   contained
mortgage-backed  securities issued by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
with an aggregate book value in excess of 10% of our equity.  The aggregate book
value at  September  30, 2004 of  mortgage-backed  securities  in our  portfolio
issued by the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  also exceeded 10% of our
equity. The aggregate book value and aggregate market value for  mortgage-backed
securities issued by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage  Corporation that we held at
September 30, 2004 totaled $294.5 million and $296.8 million,  respectively. The
aggregate book value and aggregate market value for  mortgage-backed  securities
issued by the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association that we held at September
30, 2004 totaled $345.4 million and $350.7 million,  respectively.  At September
30, 2004, all of the securities we hold issued by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation and the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  were classified as
held to maturity.  Other than  securities  issued by the U.S.  government or its
agencies,  at September 30, 2004 we did not hold  securities of any other issuer
having an aggregate book value in excess of 10% of our equity.

         We do not  currently  participate  in hedging  programs,  interest rate
caps,  floors or swaps,  or other  activities  involving the use of  off-balance
sheet derivative financial  instruments.  Further, we do not purchase securities
which are not rated investment grade.

         Actual  maturities  of  the  securities  held  by us  may  differ  from
contractual  maturities  because  issuers  may have the  right to call or prepay
obligations with or without prepayment penalties.  At September 30, 2004, we had
$355.6 million of callable securities in our portfolio.

         Mortgage-backed  Securities.  We invest in  mortgage-backed  securities
issued by U.S. government  agencies or  government-sponsored  entities,  such as
Government  National  Mortgage  Association,  the  Federal  Home  Loan  Mortgage
Corporation and the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association.  Mortgage-  backed
securities are  pass-through  securities  typically issued with stated principal
amounts,  and the  securities  are backed by pools of mortgages  that have loans
with  interest  rates  that  are  within  a  specific  range  and  have  varying
maturities. The life of a mortgage-backed security thus approximates the life of
the  underlying  mortgages.  We focus  primarily on  mortgage-backed  securities
secured  by one-  to  four-  family  mortgages.  The  mortgage  originators  use
intermediaries   (generally   government   agencies   and   government-sponsored
enterprises,  but also a  variety  of  private  corporate  issuers)  to pool and
repackage the participation interests in the form of securities,  with investors
such as us receiving the principal and interest  payments on the mortgages.  The
characteristics  of the  underlying  pool of  mortgages,  i.e.,  fixed-  rate or
adjustable-rate,  as well as prepayment  risk, are passed on to the  certificate
holder.  Mortgage-  backed  securities  are  generally  referred  to as mortgage
participation certificates or pass-through certificates.

                                       81



         We do not  currently  invest in  mortgage-backed  securities of private
issuers or collateralized  mortgage obligations.  Securities issued or sponsored
by U.S. government agencies and government- sponsored entities are guaranteed as
to  the  payment  of  principal  and  interest  to  investors.   Mortgage-backed
securities  generally  yield  less  than  the  mortgage  loans  underlying  such
securities as a result of their payment guarantees or credit  enhancements which
offer nominal credit risk to the security holder.

         The  following  table sets forth the carrying  value of our  securities
portfolio at the dates indicated.




                                                 At                                             At
                                            September 30,                                     June 30,
                                            -------------        ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                2004             2004            2003            2002          2001          2000
                                                ----             ----            ----            ----          ----          ----

                                                                                   (In thousands)                     
                                                                                                             
Securities Available for Sale:                                                       
-----------------------------
Mutual funds.................................  $   14,025     $   13,899      $   14,196      $   13,682     $ 13,203      $ 12,577
Common stock.................................      16,381         15,894          12,748          15,367       17,576        10,169
U.S. government obligations..................           -              -               -               -          980         2,917
Trust preferred securities due
    after ten years..........................      10,929         11,771          10,896          10,630       10,608        10,503
                                               ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------     --------      --------
      Total securities available for sale....      41,335         41,564          37,840          39,679       42,367        36,166
                                               ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------     --------      --------
Investment Securities Held to Maturity:
---------------------------------------
U.S. government obligations..................     273,350        274,401         169,968          60,225      145,080       420,826
Obligations of states and political
    subdivisions.............................     172,419        161,469         117,353          79,221       48,875        49,400
                                               ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------     --------      --------
      Total investment securities
           held to maturity..................     445,769        435,870         287,321         139,446      193,955       470,226
                                               ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------     --------      --------
Mortgage-Backed Securities Held to Maturity:
-------------------------------------------
Government National Mortgage Association.....      84,995         94,499         150,699         178,220      198,528       231,389
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.......     294,451        314,221         197,962         302,246      218,116       101,006
Federal National Mortgage Association........     345,430        362,633         331,061         454,552      215,330        95,489
Collateralized mortgage obligations
    issued by U.S. government agencies.......           -              -           1,894          33,494       56,999        56,679
Other........................................           -              -               3               4          231           408
                                               ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------     --------      --------
      Total mortgage-backed securities
          held to maturity...................     724,876        771,353         681,619         968,516      689,204       484,971
                                               ----------     ----------      ----------      ----------     --------      --------
 Total.......................................  $1,211,980     $1,248,787      $1,006,780      $1,147,641     $925,526      $991,363
                                               ==========     ==========      ==========      ==========     ========      ========


                                       82



         The  following  table  sets forth  certain  information  regarding  the
carrying  values,  weighted  average  yields and  maturities  of our  securities
portfolio at September 30, 2004.  This table shows  contractual  maturities  and
does not reflect  repricing or the effect of prepayments.  Actual maturities may
differ.





                                                                    At September 30, 2004
                        ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
                        One Year or Less    One to Five Years  Five to Ten Years  More than Ten Years  Total Investment Securities
                        ----------------    -----------------  ------------------ -------------------  ---------------------------
                       Carrying   Average   Carrying  Average Carrying  Average   Carrying Average    Carrying   Average   Market
                        Value      Yield      Value    Yield   Value     Yield     Value   Yield       Value      Yield    Value
                       -------    -------    -------  ------- -------   -------  -------   ------     -------    -------   ------
                                                                     (Dollars in thousands)

                                                                                       
Mutual funds........... $14,025      3.31%  $      -        -% $     -         -% $      -      -% $   14,025     3.31% $   14,025
Common stock...........  16,381      1.80          -        -        -         -         -      -      16,381     1.80      16,381
Trust preferred 
   securities
   due after ten years.       -         -          -        -        -         -    10,929   4.14      10,929     4.14      10,929
U.S. government 
   obligations.........   7,000      1.60    249,262     3.18      494     10.60    16,595   1.85     273,350     3.07     271,418
Obligations of 
   states and political
   subdivisions........   4,481      4.78     15,822     3.43   75,365      3.76    76,752   3.95     172,419     3.84     176,084
Government National
   Mortgage Association       2      7.93      1,100     7.52      736     11.55    83,157   4.45      84,995     4.55      87,376
Federal Home Loan
   Mortgage Corporation       1      9.00      3,828     5.51    2,474      5.19   288,148   4.76     294,451     4.77     296,808
Federal National 
   Mortgage Association     880      5.99      1,909     6.22   18,884      5.57   323,757   4.89     345,430     4.94     350,747
                        -------             --------           -------             -------         ----------           ----------

  Total................ $42,770      2.66%  $271,921     3.27% $97,953      4.24% $799,338   4.64% $1,211,980     4.23% $1,223,768
                        =======             ========           =======            ========         ==========           ==========


                                       83



         The  following  table  sets forth  certain  information  regarding  the
carrying  values,  weighted  average  yields and  maturities  of our  securities
portfolio at June 30, 2004. This table shows contractual maturities and does not
reflect repricing or the effect of prepayments. Actual maturities may differ.





                                                                       At June, 2004
                        -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        One Year or Less    One to Five Years  Five to Ten Years  More than Ten Years  Total Investment Securities
                        ----------------    -----------------  ------------------ -------------------  ---------------------------
                        Carrying  Average   Carrying  Average Carrying  Average   Carrying Average    Carrying   Average   Market
                         Value     Yield      Value    Yield   Value     Yield     Value   Yield       Value      Yield    Value
                        --------  -------    -------  ------- -------   -------  -------   ------     -------    -------   ------
                                                                   (Dollars in thousands)

                                                                                    
Mutual funds.............. $13,899    3.18%  $      -      -%  $     -       -%  $      -      -% $   13,899   3.18% $   13,899
Common stock..............  15,894    1.90          -      -         -       -          -      -      15,894   1.90      15,894
Trust preferred securities
   due after ten years....       -       -          -      -         -       -     11,771   3.94      11,771   3.94      11,771
U.S. government obligations      -       -    246,259   3.09    10,493    4.62     17,649   1.58     274,401   3.05     269,140
Obligations of states and
   political subdivisions.   5,386    4.75     13,606   3.87    65,990    3.73     76,487   3.96     161,469   3.89     159,635
Government National
   Mortgage Association...       4    7.52      1,072   7.43     1,006   10.84     92,417   4.51      94,499   4.61      95,519
Federal Home Loan
   Mortgage Corporation...       2    9.00      4,451   5.51     2,768    5.37    307,000   4.79     314,221   4.80     313,188
Federal National Mortgage
   Association............   1,299    6.50      2,079   6.24    19,391    5.58    339,864   4.94     362,633   4.98     364,004
                           -------           --------          -------           --------         ----------         ----------

  Total................... $36,484    2.97%  $267,467   3.21%  $99,648    4.30%  $845,188   4.66% $1,248,787   4.27% $1,243,050
                           =======    ====   ========   ====   =======    ====   ========   ====  ==========   ====  ==========

                                       84


Sources of Funds

         General.  Deposits  are our major source of funds for lending and other
investment purposes.  In addition, we derive funds from loan and mortgage-backed
securities  principal  repayments,  and  proceeds  from the maturity and call of
investment  securities.  Loan and  securities  payments are a relatively  stable
source of funds,  while deposit inflows are significantly  influenced by general
interest rates and money market  conditions.  Borrowings  (principally  from the
Federal  Home Loan  Bank) are also used to  supplement  the  amount of funds for
lending and investment.

         Deposits.  Our current deposit  products  include  checking and savings
accounts,  certificates of deposit accounts ranging in terms from thirty days to
five years,  and individual  retirement  accounts.  Deposit  account terms vary,
primarily as to the required minimum balance amount, the amount of time that the
funds must remain on deposit and the applicable interest rate.

         Deposits are  obtained  primarily  from within New Jersey.  Traditional
methods of advertising are used to attract new customers and deposits, including
radio, print media,  direct mail and inserts included with customer  statements.
We do not utilize the services of deposit  brokers.  Premiums or incentives  for
opening  accounts are  sometimes  offered.  We  periodically  select  particular
certificate of deposit  maturities  for  promotion.  We also offer a twenty-five
basis point premium on certificate  accounts with a term of at least one year to
certificate  of deposit  account  holders that have  $200,000 or more on deposit
with Kearny Federal  Savings Bank. We also offer the opportunity one time during
the term of the  certificate  to "bump  up" the rate  paid on all  17-month  and
29-month  certificates  of deposit from the rate set on such  certificate to the
current rate being offering by Kearny Federal  Savings Bank on  certificates  of
that particular maturity.

         The  determination of interest rates is based upon a number of factors,
including:  (1) our need for funds based on loan demand,  current  maturities of
deposits and other cash flow needs;  (2) a current survey of a selected group of
competitors' rates for similar products; (3) our current cost of funds, yield on
assets and  asset/liability  position;  and (4) the alternate cost of funds on a
wholesale  basis,  in particular the cost of advances from the Federal Home Loan
Bank.  Interest  rates are reviewed by senior  management  on a weekly basis and
rates are set generally  with the intent to be in the top five to ten percent of
the competition.

         A large  percentage  of our  deposits are in  certificates  of deposit,
which totaled 57.5% of total deposits at September 30, 2004. Our liquidity could
be reduced if a significant  amount of certificates of deposit maturing within a
short period of time were not renewed.  Historically,  a significant  portion of
the certificates of deposit remain with us after they mature and we believe that
this will continue.  At September 30, 2004,  $181.7  million,  or 20.9%,  of our
certificates of deposit were "jumbo"  certificates of $100,000 or more.  Deposit
inflows are significantly  influenced by general interest rates and money market
conditions.  The inflow of jumbo  certificates  of deposit and the  retention of
such deposits upon maturity are particularly sensitive to general interest rates
and money market conditions,  making jumbo certificates of deposit traditionally
a more volatile  source of funding than core deposits.  In order to retain jumbo
certificates  of deposit,  we may have to pay a premium  rate,  resulting  in an
increase in our cost of funds. In a rising rate environment, we may be unwilling
or unable to pay a  competitive  rate.  To the extent that such  deposits do not
remain  with us,  they may  need to be  replaced  with  borrowings  which  could
increase our cost of funds and  negatively  impact our interest  rate spread and
our financial condition.

                                       85



         The following tables set forth the distribution of average deposits for
the periods  indicated and the weighted  average nominal interest rates for each
period on each category of deposits presented.



                                                                 For the Three Months Ended September 30,
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                2004                                          2003
                                                                ----                                          ----
                                                                               Weighted                                   Weighted
                                                               Percent         Average                       Percent      Average
                                                               of Total        Nominal                       of Total     Nominal
                                                 Amount        Deposits         Rate           Amount        Deposits      Rate
                                                 ------        --------         ----           ------        --------      ----
                                                                          (Dollars in thousands)

                                                                                                        
 Non-interest-bearing demand...........      $   53,333           3.49%          0.00%      $   49,242         3.08%        0.00%
 Interest-bearing demand...............         106,638           6.99           0.72          108,047         6.75         0.71
 Savings and club......................         481,667          31.56           1.03          458,645        28.65         1.54
 Certificates of deposit...............         884,725          57.96           2.11          984,699        61.52         2.49
                                             ----------         ------                      ----------       ------

    Total deposits.....................      $1,526,363         100.00%          1.60%      $1,600,633       100.00%        2.02%
                                             ==========         ======                      ==========       ======




                                                                        For the Year Ended June 30,
                               -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  2004                             2003                               2002
                               ------------------------------------- ------------------------------- -------------------------------
                                                            Weighted                       Weighted                         Weighted
                                                Percent     Average              Percent   Average               Percent    Average
                                                of Total    Nominal              of Total  Nominal               of Total   Nominal
                                      Amount    Deposits     Rate      Amount    Deposits   Rate        Amount   Deposits    Rate
                                      ------    --------     ----      ------    --------   ----        ------   --------    ----
                                                                             (Dollars in thousands)

                                                                                                  
 Non-interest-bearing demand..    $    49,797      3.17%      -%    $   45,431     2.90%        -%   $   38,972       2.79%      -%
 Interest-bearing demand......        109,830      6.99    0.80         98,926     6.32      1.09        93,638       6.70    1.38
 Savings and club.............        448,509     28.55    1.23        417,780    26.71      1.58       340,655      24.38    2.31
 Certificates of deposit......        963,089     61.29    2.25      1,002,229    64.07      3.22       924,011      66.13    4.32
                                   ----------    ------             ----------   ------              ----------     ------

    Total deposits............     $1,571,225    100.00%   1.79%    $1,564,366   100.00%     2.55%   $1,397,276     100.00%   3.51%
                                   ==========    ======             ==========   ======              ==========     ======


                                       86



         The following table sets forth  certificates  of deposit  classified by
interest rate as of the dates indicated.

                               At
                         September 30,                    At June 30,
                         -------------   ---------------------------------------
                              2004          2004              2003        2002
                             ------         ----              ----        ----
                                         (In thousands)

Interest Rate
0.00-1.99%.........         $545,134     $582,665         $ 510,306    $177,162
2.00-2.99%.........          200,490      173,505           175,775     286,074
3.00-3.99%.........           85,811      100,138           146,170     169,163
4.00-4.99%.........           25,723       25,956           145,290     200,885
5.00-5.99%.........           10,006       11,957            25,724      60,575
6.00-6.99%.........            1,937        2,716             7,504      60,614
7.00-7.99%.........               83           82               249         806
                            --------     --------        ----------    --------
  Total............         $869,184     $897,019        $1,011,018    $955,279
                            ========     ========        ==========    ========

         The   following   table  sets  forth  the  amount  and   maturities  of
certificates of deposit at September 30, 2004.



                                                                             Amount Due
                                    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    Within                                                                    After
Interest Rate                       1 year       1-2 years       2-3 years       3-4 years      4-5 years    5 years      Total
-------------                       ------       ---------       ---------       ---------      ---------    -------      -----
                                                                           (In thousands)
                                                                                                       
0.00-1.99%................        $534,014        $ 11,009         $     -         $     -        $     -       $111     $545,134
2.00-2.99%................          83,948         100,902          15,388             252              -          -      200,490
3.00-3.99%................          34,806          21,016          10,089          10,076          9,808         16       85,811
4.00-4.99%................          10,996             856           9,413           1,370          2,993         95       25,723
5.00-5.99%................           3,497           3,984           2,416             109              -          -       10,006
6.00-6.99%................           1,371             566               -               -              -          -        1,937
7.00-7.99%................              83               -               -               -              -          -           83
                                  --------        --------         -------         -------        -------       ----     --------
  Total...................        $668,715        $138,333         $37,306         $11,807        $12,801       $222     $869,184
                                  ========        ========         =======         =======        =======       ====     ========


         The   following   table  sets  forth  the  amount  and   maturities  of
certificates of deposit at June 30, 2004.



                                                                              Amount Due
                                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    Within                                                                      After
Interest Rate                       1 year       1-2 years       2-3 years       3-4 years      4-5 years     5 years       Total
-------------                       ------       ---------       ---------       ---------      ---------     -------       -----
                                                                            (In thousands)
                                                                                                        
0.00-1.99%................        $572,063         $10,483         $     9         $     -        $     -    $    110     $582,665
2.00-2.99%................          54,767          96,413          22,061             260              4           -      173,505
3.00-3.99%................          62,690          17,120           1,308           7,585         11,411          24      100,138
4.00-4.99%................          13,491             908           5,406           6,000             57          94       25,956
5.00-5.99%................           4,733           3,311           2,840           1,073              -           -       11,957
6.00-6.99%................           2,114             602               -               -              -           -        2,716
7.00-7.99%................              82               -               -               -              -           -           82
                                  --------        --------         -------         -------        -------    --------     --------
  Total...................        $709,940        $128,837         $31,624         $14,918        $11,472    $    228     $897,019
                                  ========        ========         =======         =======        =======    ========     ========

                                       87



         The  following  tables  show the amount of  certificates  of deposit of
$100,000 or more by time remaining until maturity as of the dates indicated.


                                                     At September 30, 2004
                                                     ---------------------
Maturity Period                                         (In thousands)
---------------
Within three months..........................                $51,028
Three through six months.....................                 40,047
Six through twelve months....................                 46,326
Over twelve months...........................                 44,272
                                                            --------
                                                            $181,673
                                                            ========



                                                       At June 30, 2004
                                                       ----------------
Maturity Period                                         (In thousands)
---------------
Within three months..........................               $ 64,956
Three through six months.....................                 34,882
Six through twelve months....................                 44,089
Over twelve months...........................                 44,082
                                                            --------
                                                            $188,009
                                                            ========

         Borrowings. To supplement our deposits as a source of funds for lending
or  investment,  we borrow  funds in the form of advances  from the Federal Home
Loan  Bank.  We make use of  Federal  Home  Loan  Bank  advances  as part of our
interest  rate risk  management,  primarily to extend the duration of funding to
match the longer term fixed rate loans held in the loan portfolio as part of our
growth strategy.

         Advances from the Federal Home Loan Bank are  typically  secured by the
Federal  Home Loan Bank stock we own and a portion of our  residential  mortgage
loans  and  may  be  secured  by  other  assets,  mainly  securities  which  are
obligations  of or guaranteed  by the U.S.  government.  Additional  information
regarding our Federal Home Loan Bank  advances is included  under Note 12 to the
consolidated financial statements beginning on page F-1.

         Short-term  Federal Home Loan Bank  advances  generally  have  original
maturities of less than one year. The details of these  short-term  advances are
presented below for the dates and periods indicated.




                                                At or For the Three Months                     At or For the
                                                    Ended September 30,                     Year Ended June 30,
                                                   ---------------------                    -------------------
                                                   2004       2003              2004           2003          2002
                                                   ----       ----              ----           ----          ----
                                                                   (Dollars in thousands)
                                                                                             
Federal Home Loan Bank Advances:
Average balance outstanding................       $22,065   $      -           $ 1,151       $   274       $3,364
Maximum amount outstanding
   at any month-end during the period......       $20,000   $      -           $30,000       $10,000       $8,500
Balance outstanding at end of period.......       $20,000   $      -           $30,000       $     -       $    -
Weighted average interest rate
   during the period.......................          1.59%         -%             1.43%         1.37%        3.56%
Weighted average interest rate
   at end of period........................          1.78%         -%             1.43%            -%           -%


                                       88



         At  September  30,  2004,  long-term  Federal  Home Loan Bank  advances
totaled $64.1 million.  Advances consist of fixed-rate advances that will mature
within one to seven years. The advances are  collateralized by Federal Home Loan
Bank stock and certain  first  mortgage  loans and  mortgage-backed  securities.
These  advances had a weighted  average  interest rate of 5.50% at September 30,
2004.  Unused  overnight  lines of  credit  at the  Federal  Home  Loan  Bank at
September 30, 2004 were $100.0 million.

         As of September 30, 2004, long-term advances mature as follows:


Twelve Months Ending September 30,                 (In thousands)
----------------------------------
2005......................................             $ 2,556
2006......................................                 590
2007......................................               5,626
2008......................................              37,328
2009......................................               8,000
Thereafter................................              10,000
                                                       -------
       Total..............................             $64,100
                                                       =======

Subsidiary Activity

         Kearny  Financial Corp. has no  subsidiaries  other than Kearny Federal
Savings Bank.  Kearny Federal Savings Bank has two  subsidiaries:  KFS Financial
Services, Inc. and Kearny Federal Investment Corp.

         KFS  Financial  Services,   Inc.  was  incorporated  as  a  New  Jersey
corporation in 1994 under the name of South Bergen Financial Services, Inc., was
acquired  in  Kearny's  merger with South  Bergen  Savings  Bank in 1999 and was
renamed  KFS  Financial  Services,  Inc.  in 2000.  It is a service  corporation
subsidiary  organized for the purpose of selling insurance  products,  including
annuities,  to bank  customers  and the  general  public  through a third  party
networking arrangement. KFS Financial Services, Inc. is not a licensed insurance
agency,  and it may only offer  insurance  products  through an agreement with a
licensed  insurance  agency.  KFS Financial  Services,  Inc. has entered into an
agreement  with  Savings  Bank  Life  Insurance  of  Massachusetts,  a  licensed
insurance agency, through which it offers insurance products.

         Kearny  Federal  Investment  Corp. was organized in June 2004 under New
Jersey law as a New  Jersey  investment  company  primarily  to hold  investment
securities. At September 30, 2004, it held assets totaling $545.9 million.

         At September 30, 2004, West Essex Insurance Agency,  which was acquired
in the West Essex Bank merger,  also existed as a subsidiary  of Kearny  Federal
Savings Bank. There was limited activity in this subsidiary following the merger
of West Essex Bank into Kearny, and this subsidiary is expected to be dissolved.

Personnel

         As of  September  30,  2004,  we had  253  full-time  employees  and 20
part-time  employees.   The  employees  are  not  represented  by  a  collective
bargaining unit. We believe our relationship with our employees is good.

                                       89



Properties and Equipment

         At September  30, 2004,  our net  investment  in property and equipment
totaled $28.4  million.  We use Financial  Services,  Inc.  ("FSI"),  an outside
service company headquartered in Glen Rock, New Jersey, for data processing.

         The  following  table sets forth the  location  of our main  office and
branch  offices,  the year each office was opened and the net book value of each
office.  The  following  table does not  include  the Lacey,  New Jersey de novo
branch office, which is expected to open in the first quarter of 2005. The total
cost of the Lacey office is estimated to be approximately $2.3 million.  We plan
during 2005 to replace  three  office  locations  with new  buildings at or near
their current locations,  at an estimated cost of approximately $1.9 million per
branch.  Furthermore, in December of 2004, we acquired a 3.7 acre parcel of land
in West  Caldwell,  New  Jersey for  approximately  $2.3  million.  We intend to
construct a branch  office at this  location  and  subdivide  and lease to third
parties the portion of land not used for the branch building.




                                       Year Facility       Leased or         Net Book Value at
Office Location                            Opened            Owned           September 30, 2004
---------------                            ------            -----           ------------------

                                                                             
Executive Office:                         2004(1)            Owned              $        - (1)
120 Passaic Avenue
Fairfield, New Jersey

Main Office:                              1928(2)            Owned                $570,417
614 Kearny Avenue
Kearny, New Jersey

Branch Offices:
Bayville(3)                                 1973             Leased                $44,100
425 Route 9 & Ocean Gate Drive
Bayville, New Jersey

Caldwell(4)                                 1968             Owned                $161,999
417 Bloomfield Avenue
Caldwell, New Jersey

East Rutherford(5)                          1969             Owned                 $42,419
20 Willow Street
East Rutherford, New Jersey

Franklin Lakes(4)                           1978             Leased                 $5,605
574 Franklin Avenue
Franklin Lakes, New Jersey

Harrison                                    1995             Owned                $317,874
534 Harrison Avenue
Harrison, New Jersey

Irvington(3)                                1962             Owned                 $37,649
860 18th Avenue
Irvington, New Jersey

Lyndhurst                                   1970             Owned                $135,164
307 Stuyvesant Avenue
Lyndhurst, New Jersey

Milltown(3)                                 1989             Leased                $15,221
270 Ryders Lane
Milltown, New Jersey



                                       90






                                       Year Facility       Leased or         Net Book Value at
Office Location                            Opened            Owned           September 30, 2004
---------------                            ------            -----           ------------------
                                                                             
Montville(5)                                1996             Leased                $33,101
339 Main Road
Montville, New Jersey

Northvale(4)                                1965             Owned                $158,754
119 Paris Avenue
Northvale, New Jersey

North Arlington                             1952             Owned                 $56,063
80 Ridge Road
North Arlington, New Jersey

Old Bridge(3)                               2002             Owned                $976,282
510 State Highway 34
Old Bridge Township, New Jersey

Old Tappan(4)                               1973             Owned                $225,730
207 Old Tappan Road
Old Tappan, New Jersey

Pine Brook(4)                               1974             Owned                $142,336
267 Changebridge Road
Pine Brook, New Jersey

Pleasantdale(4)                             1971             Owned                 $82,636
West Orange (Pleasantdale)
487 Pleasant Valley Way
West Orange, New Jersey

River Vale(4)                               1965             Owned                $208,501
653 Westwood Avenue
River Vale, New Jersey

Rutherford                                  1974             Owned                 $80,243
252 Park Avenue
Rutherford, New Jersey

Spotswood(3)                                1979             Owned                $223,361
520 Main Street
Spotswood, New Jersey

Springfield(3)                              1991             Owned              $1,278,711
130 Mountain Avenue
Springfield, New Jersey

Toms River(3)                               1996             Owned                $649,845
827 Fischer Boulevard
Toms River, New Jersey

Tory Corner(4)                              1975             Owned                 $79,050
West Orange (Tory Corner)
216 Main Street
West Orange, New Jersey

Wanaque(5)                                  1996             Leased                $20,382
4 Union Avenue
Haskell, New Jersey


                                       91





                                       Year Facility       Leased or         Net Book Value at
Office Location                            Opened            Owned           September 30, 2004
---------------                            ------            -----           ------------------
                                                                             
Wood-Ridge(5)                               1957             Owned             $1,659,353
250 Valley Boulevard
Wood-Ridge, New Jersey

Wyckoff                                     2002             Owned             $2,167,536
661 Wyckoff Avenue
Wyckoff, New Jersey


----------------                                       
(1)  We began moving management staff and administrative operations into our new
     53,000  square feet  administrative  building in  Fairfield,  New Jersey in
     October 2004 and completed the move-in  phase in December  2004.  The total
     cost of this building is expected to be approximately $13.5 million,  which
     cost will be capitalized and amortized over a forty-year period.
(2)  The main  office  opened at this site in 1928 and was  rebuilt  on the same
     site in 1968.
(3)  This branch was acquired in acquisition of Pulaski  Savings Bank in October
     2002.
(4)  This branch was acquired in  acquisition of West Essex Savings Bank in July
     2003.
(5)  This branch was acquired in  acquisition  of South  Bergen  Savings Bank in
     April 1999.

Legal Proceedings

         Kearny Federal  Savings Bank,  from time to time, is a party to routine
litigation  which  arises in the normal  course of  business,  such as claims to
enforce liens,  condemnation proceedings on properties in which we hold security
interests, claims involving the making and servicing of real property loans, and
other issues incident to our business.  There were no lawsuits  pending or known
to be contemplated against Kearny Financial Corp. or Kearny Federal Savings Bank
at June 30, 2004 that would have a material effect on our operations or income.

                                   REGULATION

         Kearny Federal  Savings Bank and Kearny  Financial  Corp.  operate in a
highly regulated industry. This regulation establishes a comprehensive framework
of  activities in which a savings and loan holding  company and federal  savings
bank may engage and is  intended  primarily  for the  protection  of the deposit
insurance fund and depositors. Set forth below is a brief description of certain
laws that relate to the  regulation  of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank and Kearny
Financial Corp. The description does not purport to be complete and is qualified
in its entirety by reference to applicable laws and regulations.

         Regulatory  authorities  have extensive  discretion in connection  with
their  supervisory  and  enforcement  activities,  including  the  imposition of
restrictions  on the operation of an institution  and its holding  company,  the
classification of assets by the institution and the adequacy of an institution's
allowance for loan losses. Any change in such regulation and oversight,  whether
in the form of regulatory policy, regulations, or legislation, including changes
in the regulations  governing  mutual holding  companies,  could have a material
adverse impact on Kearny Financial Corp., Kearny Federal Savings Bank, and their
operations.  The adoption of  regulations or the enactment of laws that restrict
the operations of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank and/or Kearny  Financial Corp. or
impose  burdensome  requirements  upon one or both of them  could  reduce  their
profitability  and  could  impair  the value of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's
franchise,  resulting  in  negative  effects  on the  trading  price  of  Kearny
Financial Corp. common stock.

                                       92



Regulation of Kearny Federal Savings Bank

         General.   As  a  federally   chartered,   Federal  Deposit   Insurance
Corporation-insured  savings  bank,  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank is subject to
extensive regulation by the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Federal Deposit
Insurance   Corporation.   This   regulatory   structure  gives  the  regulatory
authorities  extensive  discretion  in  connection  with their  supervisory  and
enforcement  activities and examination  policies,  including policies regarding
the classification of assets and the level of the allowance for loan losses. The
activities  of  federal  savings  banks  are  subject  to  extensive  regulation
including  restrictions or  requirements  with respect to loans to one borrower,
the percentage of  non-mortgage  loans or  investments to total assets,  capital
distributions,   permissible  investments  and  lending  activities,  liquidity,
transactions with affiliates and community  reinvestment.  Federal savings banks
are also subject to reserve  requirements imposed by the Federal Reserve System.
A federal  savings  bank's  relationship  with its  depositors  and borrowers is
regulated  by both state and  federal  law,  especially  in such  matters as the
ownership of savings  accounts  and the form and content of the bank's  mortgage
documents.

         Kearny Federal Savings Bank must file reports with the Office of Thrift
Supervision  concerning its activities and financial condition,  and must obtain
regulatory approvals prior to entering into certain transactions such as mergers
with or  acquisitions  of other  financial  institutions.  The  Office of Thrift
Supervision  regularly examines Kearny Federal Savings Bank and prepares reports
to Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank's Board of Directors on  deficiencies,  if any,
found in its  operations.  The  Office of  Thrift  Supervision  has  substantial
discretion to impose  enforcement  action on an institution that fails to comply
with  applicable  regulatory  requirements,  particularly  with  respect  to its
capital requirements. In addition, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has
the  authority to recommend to the Director of the Office of Thrift  Supervision
that  enforcement  action  be  taken  with  respect  to a  particular  federally
chartered savings bank and, if action is not taken by the Director,  the Federal
Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  has authority to take such action under certain
circumstances.

         Insurance  of  Deposit   Accounts.   The  Federal   Deposit   Insurance
Corporation  administers two separate deposit  insurance funds.  Generally,  the
Bank  Insurance  Fund insures the deposits of  commercial  banks and the Savings
Association Insurance Fund insures the deposits of savings institutions.  Kearny
Federal Savings Bank's deposits are insured by the Savings Association Insurance
Fund.  The Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  is  authorized  to increase
deposit  insurance  premiums if it determines  such increases are appropriate to
maintain  the  reserves  of  either  the  Bank  Insurance  Fund  or the  Savings
Association  Insurance Fund or to fund the administration of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation. In addition, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is
authorized to levy  emergency  special  assessments  on Bank  Insurance Fund and
Savings  Association  Insurance  Fund  members.  The Federal  Deposit  Insurance
Corporation  maintains a risk-based  assessment system by which institutions are
assigned to one of three  categories  based on their  capitalization  and one of
three   subcategories   based  on  examination  ratings  and  other  supervisory
information.  An  institution's  assessment  rate depends upon the categories to
which it is  assigned.  Assessment  rates are  determined  semi-annually  by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and currently range from zero basis points
of assessable  deposits for the  healthiest  institutions  to 27 basis points of
assessable  deposits for the riskiest.  The  assessment  rate for Kearny Federal
Savings Bank is currently 0%.

         The Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  has authority to increase
insurance assessments. A material increase in Savings Association Insurance Fund
insurance premiums would likely have an adverse effect on the operating expenses
and results of operations of Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank.  Management  cannot
predict what insurance assessment rates will be in the future.

                                       93



         The  Federal   Deposit   Insurance   Corporation   may   terminate   an
institution's  deposit insurance upon a finding that the institution has engaged
in unsafe or unsound practices, is in an unsafe or unsound condition to continue
operations  or has violated  any  applicable  law,  regulation,  rule,  order or
condition imposed by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation or the Office of
Thrift Supervision.  The management of Kearny Federal Savings Bank does not know
of any  practice,  condition  or  violation  that might lead to  termination  of
deposit insurance.

         In  addition,   all  Federal  Deposit   Insurance   Corporation-insured
institutions  are required to pay assessments to the Federal  Deposit  Insurance
Corporation  to  fund  interest  payments  on  bonds  issued  by  the  Financing
Corporation, an agency of the federal government established to recapitalize the
predecessor to the Savings  Association  Insurance Fund. These  assessments will
continue until the Financing Corporation bonds mature in 2017.

         Regulatory Capital  Requirements.  Office of Thrift Supervision capital
regulations   require  savings   institutions  to  meet  three  minimum  capital
standards:  (1) tangible  capital equal to 1.5% of total  adjusted  assets,  (2)
"Tier 1" or  "core"  capital  equal to at  least 4% (3% if the  institution  has
received the highest  possible  rating on its most recent  examination) of total
adjusted assets, and (3) risk-based  capital equal to 8% of total  risk-weighted
assets.  At September 30, 2004,  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank was in compliance
with the minimum  capital  standards  and qualified as "well  capitalized."  For
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's   compliance  with  these  regulatory   capital
standards, see Historical and Pro Forma Capital Compliance on page 31 as well as
Note 14 to the consolidated financial statements.  In assessing an institution's
capital adequacy,  the Office of Thrift Supervision takes into consideration not
only these numeric  factors but also  qualitative  factors as well,  and has the
authority to establish higher capital  requirements for individual  institutions
where necessary.

         In  addition,  the  Office of Thrift  Supervision  may  require  that a
savings  institution  that has a risk-  based  capital  ratio of less than 8%, a
ratio of Tier 1 capital  to  risk-weighted  assets of less than 4% or a ratio of
Tier 1 capital to total adjusted  assets of less than 4% (3% if the  institution
has received  the highest  rating on its most recent  examination)  take certain
action to increase its capital ratios. If the savings  institution's  capital is
significantly  below  the  minimum  required  levels  of  capital  or  if  it is
unsuccessful in increasing its capital ratios,  the Office of Thrift Supervision
may restrict its activities.

         For purposes of the Office of Thrift Supervision  capital  regulations,
tangible  capital is defined as core capital less all  intangible  assets except
for certain  mortgage  servicing  rights.  Tier 1 or core  capital is defined as
common  stockholders'  equity,  non-cumulative  perpetual  preferred  stock  and
related  surplus,  minority  interests  in the equity  accounts of  consolidated
subsidiaries,  and certain  non-withdrawable  accounts  and pledged  deposits of
mutual   savings  banks.   Kearny  Federal   Savings  Bank  does  not  have  any
non-withdrawable  accounts  or pledged  deposits.  Tier 1 and core  capital  are
reduced by an  institution's  intangible  assets,  with limited  exceptions  for
certain  mortgage and  non-mortgage  servicing  rights and purchased credit card
relationships.  Both core and tangible  capital are further reduced by an amount
equal  to  the   savings   institution's   debt  and   equity   investments   in
"non-includable" subsidiaries engaged in activities not permissible for national
banks other than  subsidiaries  engaged in  activities  undertaken  as agent for
customers  or  in  mortgage   banking   activities  and  subsidiary   depository
institutions or their holding companies.

         The risk-based capital standard for savings  institutions  requires the
maintenance of total capital of 8% of risk-weighted assets. Total capital equals
the sum of core and  supplementary  capital.  The  components  of  supplementary
capital  include,  among other  items,  cumulative  perpetual  preferred  stock,
perpetual   subordinated   debt,   mandatory   convertible   subordinated  debt,
intermediate-term preferred stock,

                                       94



the portion of the  allowance for loan losses not  designated  for specific loan
losses and up to 45% of unrealized  gains on equity  securities.  The portion of
the allowance for loan and lease losses  includable in supplementary  capital is
limited to a maximum of 1.25% of risk-weighted  assets.  Overall,  supplementary
capital is limited to 100% of core capital.  For purposes of  determining  total
capital,  a savings  institution's  assets are  reduced by the amount of capital
instruments  held  by  other  depository  institutions  pursuant  to  reciprocal
arrangements and by the amount of the institution's  equity  investments  (other
than those deducted from core and tangible  capital) and its high  loan-to-value
ratio land loans and non-residential construction loans.

         A savings  institution's  risk-based  capital  requirement  is measured
against risk-weighted assets, which equal the sum of each on-balance-sheet asset
and the  credit-equivalent  amount of each  off-balance-  sheet item after being
multiplied by an assigned risk weight. These risk weights range from 0% for cash
to 100% for delinquent loans, property acquired through foreclosure,  commercial
loans, and certain other assets.

         The Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation  Improvement Act, or FDICIA,
requires  that the  Office  of Thrift  Supervision  and  other  federal  banking
agencies revise their risk-based capital standards,  with appropriate transition
rules,  to ensure  that  they take into  account  interest  rate  risk,  or IRR,
concentration of risk and the risks of non-traditional activities. The Office of
Thrift  Supervision  adopted  regulations,  effective  January 1, 1994, that set
forth the methodology  for calculating an IRR component to be incorporated  into
the Office of Thrift  Supervision  risk-based  capital  regulations.  On May 10,
2002,  the Office of Thrift  Supervision  adopted an  amendment  to its  capital
regulations  which  eliminated  the  IRR  component  of the  risk-based  capital
requirement.  Pursuant to the amendment,  the Office of Thrift  Supervision will
continue to monitor  the IRR of  individual  institutions  through the Office of
Thrift Supervision requirements for IRR management, the ability of the Office of
Thrift  Supervision  to  impose  individual  minimum  capital   requirements  on
institutions  that exhibit a high degree of IRR, and the  requirements of Thrift
Bulletin  13a,  which  provides  guidance  on  the  management  of IRR  and  the
responsibility of boards of directors in that area.

         The  Office of  Thrift  Supervision  continues  to  monitor  the IRR of
individual  institutions  through analysis of the change in net portfolio value,
or NPV.  NPV is defined as the net  present  value of the  expected  future cash
flows of an  entity's  assets and  liabilities  and,  therefore,  hypothetically
represents  the  value of an  institution's  net  worth.  The  Office  of Thrift
Supervision has also used this NPV analysis as part of its evaluation of certain
applications or notices submitted by thrift  institutions.  The Office of Thrift
Supervision,  through  its  general  oversight  of the safety and  soundness  of
savings  associations,  retains the right to impose minimum capital requirements
on individual  institutions  to the extent the  institution is not in compliance
with certain written guidelines  established by the Office of Thrift Supervision
regarding NPV  analysis.  The Office of Thrift  Supervision  has not imposed any
such requirements on Kearny Federal Savings Bank.

         Prompt  Corrective  Regulatory  Action.  Under  the  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision  Prompt  Corrective  Action   regulations,   the  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision is required to take  supervisory  actions  against  undercapitalized
institutions,  the  severity of which  depends upon the  institution's  level of
capital.  Generally,  a savings institution that has a ratio of total capital to
risk-weighted assets of less than 8.0%, a ratio of Tier 1 (core) capital to risk
weighted  assets of less than 4.0% or a ratio of Tier 1 capital to total  assets
that is less  than  4.0%  (3.0%  or  less  for  institutions  with  the  highest
examination rating) is considered to be undercapitalized.  A savings institution
that has a total risk-based capital ratio of less than 6.0%, a Tier 1 risk-based
capital  ratio of less than 3.0% or a  leverage  ratio that is less than 3.0% is
considered to be "significantly  undercapitalized."  A savings  institution that
has a tangible capital to assets ratio equal

                                       95



to or less than 2.0% is deemed to be "critically  undercapitalized."  Generally,
the  Office  of  Thrift  Supervision  is  required  to  appoint  a  receiver  or
conservator  for an  institution  that  is  "critically  undercapitalized."  The
regulations also provide that a capital  restoration plan must be filed with the
Office of Thrift  Supervision  within forty-five days of the date an institution
receives notice that it is "undercapitalized,"  "significantly undercapitalized"
or  "critically   undercapitalized,"  and  compliance  with  the  plan  must  be
guaranteed  by any parent  holding  company.  In  addition,  numerous  mandatory
supervisory actions become immediately applicable to the institution, including,
but not limited  to,  restrictions  on growth,  investment  activities,  capital
distributions,  and affiliate transactions. The Office of Thrift Supervision may
also  take any one of a number  of  discretionary  supervisory  actions  against
undercapitalized institutions, including the issuance of a capital directive and
the  replacement of senior  executive  officers and directors.  At September 30,
2004,  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's ratio of total capital to  risk-weighted
assets was 33.18%,  its ratio of Tier 1 (core)  capital to risk weighted  assets
was 31.27% and its ratio of Tier 1 capital to adjusted  total assets was 11.15%,
and it qualified as "well capitalized."

         Dividend  and Other  Capital  Distribution  Limitations.  The Office of
Thrift Supervision  imposes various  restrictions or requirements on the ability
of savings institutions to make capital distributions, including cash dividends.

         A  savings  institution  that is a  subsidiary  of a  savings  and loan
holding  company,  such as Kearny Federal Savings Bank, must file an application
or a notice with the Office of Thrift  Supervision  at least  thirty days before
making a capital  distribution,  such as paying a dividend  to Kearny  Financial
Corp. A savings  institution  must file an  application  for prior approval of a
capital  distribution  if: (i) it is not eligible for expedited  treatment under
the applications processing rules of the Office of Thrift Supervision;  (ii) the
total  amount of all  capital  distributions,  including  the  proposed  capital
distribution,  for the applicable  calendar year would exceed an amount equal to
the  savings   institution's   net  income  for  that  year  to  date  plus  the
institution's  retained net income for the preceding  two years;  (iii) it would
not  adequately  be  capitalized  after the  capital  distribution;  or (iv) the
distribution would violate an agreement with the Office of Thrift Supervision or
applicable regulations.

         The Office of Thrift  Supervision  may  disapprove  a notice or deny an
application for a capital  distribution if: (i) the savings institution would be
undercapitalized  following the capital distribution;  (ii) the proposed capital
distribution  raises  safety  and  soundness  concerns;  or  (iii)  the  capital
distribution would violate a prohibition contained in any statute, regulation or
agreement.  Kearny Federal  Savings Bank made a capital  distribution  to Kearny
Financial  Corp. to provide the cash paid in connection  with the acquisition of
West Essex Bank, and as a result it is likely that Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank
will be required to file an application,  rather than a notice,  for any capital
distributions for a period of time following the offering.

         Capital  distributions by Kearny Financial Corp., as a savings and loan
holding company, will not be subject to the Office of Thrift Supervision capital
distribution  rules.  Because Kearny  Financial Corp. will retain 50% of the net
proceeds of the stock offering,  the likelihood that Kearny Federal Savings Bank
must file an application  rather than a notice for capital  distributions is not
expected to affect the payment of cash  dividends by Kearny  Financial  Corp. to
its stockholders or the amount of such dividends.

         Safety and Soundness Standards. Pursuant to the requirements of FDICIA,
as amended by the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of
1994, each federal banking agency,  including the Office of Thrift  Supervision,
has  adopted  guidelines  establishing  general  standards  relating to internal
controls,  information and internal audit systems,  loan  documentation,  credit
underwriting,  interest rate exposure, asset growth, asset quality, earnings and
compensation, fees and benefits. In

                                       96



general,  the guidelines  require,  among other things,  appropriate systems and
practices  to  identify  and manage  the risks and  exposures  specified  in the
guidelines.  The guidelines  prohibit  excessive  compensation  as an unsafe and
unsound  practice and describe  compensation  as excessive when the amounts paid
are unreasonable or  disproportionate  to the services performed by an executive
officer, employee, director, or principal stockholder.

         In addition,  the Office of Thrift Supervision  adopted  regulations to
require a savings bank that is given notice by the Office of Thrift  Supervision
that it is not satisfying any of such safety and soundness standards to submit a
compliance  plan to the  Office  of  Thrift  Supervision.  If,  after  being  so
notified, a savings bank fails to submit an acceptable  compliance plan or fails
in any material respect to implement an accepted  compliance plan, the Office of
Thrift Supervision may issue an order directing  corrective and other actions of
the types to which a significantly undercapitalized institution is subject under
the "prompt  corrective action" provisions of FDICIA. If a savings bank fails to
comply with such an order, the Office of Thrift  Supervision may seek to enforce
such an order in judicial  proceedings  and to impose civil monetary  penalties.
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank has not  received  any notice  from the Office of
Thrift  Supervision  that it has failed to meet any standard  prescribed  by the
guidelines.

         Qualified Thrift Lender Test. Federal savings  institutions must meet a
qualified  thrift  lender test or they become  subject to the business  activity
restrictions and branching rules applicable to national banks.
 To qualify as a qualified thrift lender, a savings  institution must either (i)
be deemed a "domestic  building and loan association" under the Internal Revenue
Code by  maintaining  at least 60% of its total  assets  in  specified  types of
assets,  including cash,  certain  government  securities,  loans secured by and
other  assets  related  to  residential  real  property,  educational  loans and
investments  in  premises  of the  institution  or (ii)  satisfy  the  statutory
qualified  thrift  lender  test  set  forth  in the  Home  Owners'  Loan  Act by
maintaining at least 65% of its portfolio assets in qualified thrift investments
(defined  to include  residential  mortgages  and  related  equity  investments,
certain  mortgage-related  securities,  small business loans,  student loans and
credit card loans). For purposes of the statutory  qualified thrift lender test,
portfolio assets are defined as total assets minus goodwill and other intangible
assets,  the  value  of  property  used by the  institution  in  conducting  its
business,  and  specified  liquid  assets up to 20% of total  assets.  A savings
institution  must maintain its status as a qualified  thrift lender on a monthly
basis in at least nine out of every twelve months.  Kearny Federal  Savings Bank
met the qualified thrift lender test as of September 30, 2004 and in each of the
last twelve months and, therefore, qualifies as a qualified thrift lender.

         A savings bank that fails the qualified thrift lender test and does not
convert to a bank charter generally will be prohibited from: (1) engaging in any
new activity not  permissible  for a national  bank,  (2) paying  dividends  not
permissible under national bank regulations, and (3) establishing any new branch
office in a location not  permissible  for a national bank in the  institution's
home  state.  In  addition,  if the  institution  does not  requalify  under the
qualified  thrift  lender test within  three years after  failing the test,  the
institution  would be prohibited  from engaging in any activity not  permissible
for a national  bank and would have to repay any  outstanding  advances from the
Federal Home Loan Bank as promptly as possible.

         Transactions  with Related  Parties.  Federal law limits Kearny Federal
Savings  Bank's  authority to lend to, and engage in certain other  transactions
with  (collectively,  "covered  transactions"),  "affiliates" (e.g., any company
that controls or is under common control with an institution,  including  Kearny
Financial Corp., Kearny MHC and their non-savings institution subsidiaries). The
aggregate  amount of  covered  transactions  with any  individual  affiliate  is
limited to 10% of the  capital  and  surplus  of the  savings  institution.  The
aggregate amount of covered  transactions  with all affiliates is limited to 20%
of the savings  institution's  capital and  surplus.  Loans and other  specified
transactions  with  affiliates  are required to be secured by  collateral  in an
amount and of a type described in federal law. The purchase of low

                                       97



quality  assets from  affiliates  is  generally  prohibited.  Transactions  with
affiliates  must be on  terms  and  under  circumstances  that  are at  least as
favorable to the  institution  as those  prevailing  at the time for  comparable
transactions with non-affiliated  companies.  In addition,  savings institutions
are prohibited  from lending to any affiliate that is engaged in activities that
are not  permissible for bank holding  companies and no savings  institution may
purchase the securities of any affiliate other than a subsidiary.

         The  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002  generally  prohibits  a company  from
making loans to its executive officers and directors. However, that act contains
a specific  exception  for loans by a depository  institution  to its  executive
officers and directors in compliance with federal banking laws. Under such laws,
Kearny Federal Savings Bank's authority to extend credit to executive  officers,
directors and 10%  stockholders  ("insiders"),  as well as entities such persons
control, is limited.  The law restricts both the individual and aggregate amount
of loans Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank may make to insiders  based,  in part, on
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's  capital  position and requires  certain  board
approval  procedures  to  be  followed.   Such  loans  must  be  made  on  terms
substantially  the same as those  offered to  unaffiliated  individuals  and not
involve more than the normal risk of repayment.  There is an exception for loans
made pursuant to a benefit or compensation  program that is widely  available to
all employees of the  institution  and does not give preference to insiders over
other employees.

         Kearny Federal Savings Bank makes loans to its officers,  directors and
employees in the ordinary  course of business.  Such loans are on  substantially
the same terms and conditions, including interest rates and collateral, as those
of comparable transactions prevailing at the time with other persons. Such loans
also do not include more than the normal risk of collectibility or present other
unfavorable features.

         As of September 30, 2004,  June 30, 2004 and June 30, 2003,  loans made
by  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank  to  senior  officers,  directors  and  their
associates totaled  approximately  $1.6 million,  $1.6 million and $2.5 million,
respectively. During the year ended June 30, 2004, new loans to senior officers,
directors and their  associates  totaled $0,  repayments  totaled  approximately
$100,000 and loans to individuals no longer  associated  with the Kearny Federal
Savings  Bank  totaled  approximately  $774,000.  During the three  months ended
September 30, 2004, new loans to senior officers, directors and their associates
totaled $0 and repayments totaled approximately $25,000.

         Other than through loans with Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank made in the
ordinary  course of business on  substantially  the same terms and conditions as
those of comparable  transactions  prevailing at the time with other persons, no
directors,  officers or their immediate family members were engaged, directly or
indirectly,  in  transactions  with Kearny  Financial  Corp.  or any  subsidiary
exceeding $60,000 during the three years ended June 30, 2004 or the three months
ended September 30, 2004.

         Community Reinvestment Act. Under the Community Reinvestment Act, every
insured  depository  institution,  including  Kearny Federal Savings Bank, has a
continuing  and  affirmative  obligation  consistent  with its  safe  and  sound
operation to help meet the credit needs of its entire  community,  including low
and moderate  income  neighborhoods.  The  Community  Reinvestment  Act does not
establish specific lending  requirements or programs for financial  institutions
nor does it limit an  institution's  discretion to develop the types of products
and services that it believes are best suited to its particular  community.  The
Community  Reinvestment Act requires the Office of Thrift  Supervision to assess
the depository institution's record of meeting the credit needs of its community
and to take such record into account in its  evaluation of certain  applications
by such institution, such as a merger or the establishment of a branch office by
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank. An  unsatisfactory  Community  Reinvestment  Act
examination  rating may be used by the Office of Thrift Supervision as the basis
for the denial of an application. Kearny Federal

                                       98



Savings Bank received a satisfactory  Community  Reinvestment  Act rating in its
most  recent  Community  Reinvestment  Act  examination  by the Office of Thrift
Supervision.

         Federal Home Loan Bank System.  Kearny Federal Savings Bank is a member
of the  Federal  Home  Loan Bank of New  York,  which is one of twelve  regional
Federal  Home Loan  Banks.  Each  Federal  Home Loan Bank serves as a reserve or
central bank for its members within its assigned region.  It is funded primarily
from funds  deposited by financial  institutions  and proceeds  derived from the
sale of consolidated  obligations of the Federal Home Loan Bank System. It makes
loans to members pursuant to policies and procedures established by the board of
directors of the Federal Home Loan Bank.

         As a member,  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank is required to purchase and
maintain  stock in the Federal  Home Loan Bank of New York in an amount equal to
the greater of 1% of our  aggregate  unpaid  residential  mortgage  loans,  home
purchase contracts or similar obligations at the beginning of each year or 5% of
our outstanding Federal Home Loan Bank advances.  We are in compliance with this
requirement  with an  investment  in Federal Home Loan Bank of New York stock at
September 30, 2004 of $11.4 million.  The Federal Home Loan Bank imposes various
limitations  on advances  such as limiting  the amount of certain  types of real
estate  related  collateral  to 30% of a member's  capital  and  limiting  total
advances to a member.

         The  Federal  Home Loan Banks are  required  to  provide  funds for the
resolution  of troubled  savings  institutions  and to  contribute to affordable
housing programs through direct loans or interest subsidies on advances targeted
for community  investment and low- and moderate-income  housing projects.  These
contributions  have  adversely  affected  the  level of  Federal  Home Loan Bank
dividends  paid and could  continue to do so in the future.  In addition,  these
requirements  could result in the Federal Home Loan Banks imposing a higher rate
of interest on advances to their members.

         Federal  Reserve  System.  The  Federal  Reserve  System  requires  all
depository institutions to maintain  non-interest-bearing  reserves at specified
levels against their checking accounts and non-personal certificate accounts. At
September 30, 2004,  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank was in  compliance  with such
requirements.

         Savings  institutions have authority to borrow from the Federal Reserve
System "discount  window," but Federal Reserve System policy generally  requires
savings  institutions  to exhaust all other sources  before  borrowing  from the
Federal Reserve System.

         The USA Patriot Act.  Kearny Federal  Savings Bank is subject to Office
of Thrift  Supervision  regulations  implementing the Uniting and  Strengthening
America by  Providing  Appropriate  Tools  Required to  Intercept  and  Obstruct
Terrorism  Act of 2001,  or the USA Patriot  Act.  The USA Patriot Act gives the
federal government powers to address terrorist threats through enhanced domestic
security measures,  expanded surveillance powers,  increased information sharing
and broadened anti-money  laundering  requirements.  By way of amendments to the
Bank Secrecy Act,  Title III of the USA Patriot Act takes  measures  intended to
encourage information sharing among bank regulatory agencies and law enforcement
bodies. Further,  certain provisions of Title III impose affirmative obligations
on a broad range of financial institutions,  including banks, thrifts,  brokers,
dealers,  credit unions,  money transfer agents and parties registered under the
Commodity  Exchange Act. As of September 30, 2004,  management of Kearny Federal
Savings Bank believes all required actions to be taken by Kearny Federal Savings
Bank under the USA Patriot Act have been completed.

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         Among  other  requirements,  Title III of the USA  Patriot  Act and the
related  regulations  of the Office of Thrift  Supervision  impose the following
requirements with respect to financial institutions:

o    Establishment of anti-money  laundering  programs that include, at minimum:
     (i) internal policies,  procedures, and controls; (ii) specific designation
     of an anti-money  laundering  compliance  officer;  (iii) ongoing  employee
     training  programs;  and (iv) an  independent  audit  function  to test the
     anti-money laundering program.

o    Establishment of a program specifying  procedures for obtaining identifying
     information  from  customers  seeking  to  open  new  accounts,   including
     verifying the identity of customers within a reasonable period of time.

o    Establishment of appropriate,  specific, and, where necessary, enhanced due
     diligence policies,  procedures, and controls designed to detect and report
     money laundering.

o    Prohibitions  on  establishing,   maintaining,  administering  or  managing
     correspondent  accounts for foreign shell banks  (foreign banks that do not
     have a physical  presence in any  country),  and  compliance  with  certain
     record  keeping  obligations  with  respect to  correspondent  accounts  of
     foreign banks.

         Bank   regulators   are  directed  to  consider  a  holding   company's
effectiveness  in combating money  laundering when ruling on Federal Reserve Act
and Bank Merger Act applications.

Regulation of Kearny Financial Corp.

         General.  Kearny  Financial Corp. is a savings and loan holding company
within the meaning of Section 10 of the Home Owners' Loan Act. It is required to
file reports with the Office of Thrift  Supervision and is subject to regulation
and examination by the Office of Thrift Supervision. Kearny Financial Corp. must
also obtain  regulatory  approval from the Office of Thrift  Supervision  before
engaging in certain transactions,  such as mergers with or acquisitions of other
financial  institutions.  In  addition,  the  Office of Thrift  Supervision  has
enforcement   authority  over  Kearny   Financial   Corp.  and  any  non-savings
institution  subsidiaries.  This  permits  the Office of Thrift  Supervision  to
restrict or  prohibit  activities  that it  determines  to be a serious  risk to
Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank.  This  regulation  is intended  primarily for the
protection of the depositors and not for the benefit of  stockholders  of Kearny
Financial Corp.

         Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. On July 30, 2002, the President signed into
law the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002, or the Act, which implemented  legislative
reforms intended to address  corporate and accounting  fraud. In addition to the
establishment  of a new accounting  oversight board that will enforce  auditing,
quality control and  independence  standards and will be funded by fees from all
publicly traded companies,  the Act places certain  restrictions on the scope of
services that may be provided by accounting  firms to their public company audit
clients.  Any non-audit services being provided to a public company audit client
will require preapproval by the company's audit committee.  In addition, the Act
makes certain changes to the requirements for partner rotation after a period of
time. The Act requires chief executive officers and chief financial officers, or
their equivalent,  to certify to the accuracy of periodic reports filed with the
Securities and Exchange  Commission,  subject to civil and criminal penalties if
they knowingly or willingly violate this certification requirement. In addition,
under the Act,  counsel  will be  required  to  report  evidence  of a  material
violation of the  securities  laws or a breach of fiduciary duty by a company to
its chief  executive  officer or its chief legal  officer,  and, if such officer
does not appropriately  respond,  to report such evidence to the audit committee
or other similar committee of the board of directors or the board itself.

                                       100



         Under the Act,  longer prison terms will apply to corporate  executives
who violate  federal  securities  laws; the period during which certain types of
suits can be brought against a company or its officers is extended;  and bonuses
issued  to  top  executives  prior  to  restatement  of  a  company's  financial
statements  are now  subject  to  disgorgement  if such  restatement  was due to
corporate misconduct. Executives are also prohibited from insider trading during
retirement plan "blackout" periods,  and loans to company executives (other than
loans by financial  institutions permitted by federal rules and regulations) are
restricted.  In addition,  a provision  of the Act directs that civil  penalties
levied by the Securities and Exchange  Commission as a result of any judicial or
administrative  action  under the Act be  deposited to a fund for the benefit of
harmed investors.  The Federal Accounts for Investor Restitution  provision also
requires the Securities and Exchange  Commission to develop methods of improving
collection rates. The legislation  accelerates the time frame for disclosures by
public  companies,  as they must  immediately  disclose any material  changes in
their financial  condition or operations.  Directors and executive officers must
also provide information for most changes in ownership in a company's securities
within two business days of the change.

         The  Act  also  increases  the  oversight  of,  and  codifies   certain
requirements  relating  to audit  committees  of public  companies  and how they
interact with the company's "registered public accounting firm." Audit committee
members must be independent and are absolutely barred from accepting consulting,
advisory or other compensatory fees from the issuer. In addition, companies must
disclose  whether at least one member of the  committee is a "financial  expert"
(as such term is defined by the Securities and Exchange  Commission) and if not,
why not.  Under  the Act,  a  company's  registered  public  accounting  firm is
prohibited from performing  statutorily mandated audit services for a company if
such company's chief executive officer,  chief financial  officer,  comptroller,
chief accounting officer or any person serving in equivalent  positions had been
employed by such firm and  participated  in the audit of such company during the
one-year period  preceding the audit initiation date. The Act also prohibits any
officer  or  director  of a  company  or any other  person  acting  under  their
direction from taking any action to fraudulently influence,  coerce,  manipulate
or mislead  any  independent  accountant  engaged in the audit of the  company's
financial  statements  for the purpose of  rendering  the  financial  statements
materially  misleading.  The Act  also  requires  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission to prescribe rules requiring inclusion of any internal control report
and  assessment  by management  in the annual  report to  stockholders.  The Act
requires the company's  registered  public accounting firm that issues the audit
report to  attest to and  report on  management's  assessment  of the  company's
internal controls.

         Activities Restrictions. As a savings and loan holding company and as a
subsidiary  holding company of a mutual holding company,  Kearny Financial Corp.
is subject to statutory and regulatory  restrictions on its business activities.
The  non-banking  activities  of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and its non-  savings
institution  subsidiaries  are  restricted  to certain  activities  specified by
Office of Thrift Supervision  regulation,  which include performing services and
holding  properties  used  by  a  savings  institution  subsidiary,   activities
authorized for savings and loan holding  companies as of March 5, 1987, and non-
banking  activities  permissible for bank holding companies pursuant to the Bank
Holding  Company  Act of 1956 or  authorized  for  financial  holding  companies
pursuant to the  Gramm-Leach-Bliley  Act.  Before  engaging  in any  non-banking
activity or acquiring a company engaged in any such activities, Kearny Financial
Corp. must file with the Office of Thrift  Supervision  either a prior notice or
(in the case of non- banking activities  permissible for bank holding companies)
an application regarding its planned activity or acquisition.

         Mergers and  Acquisitions.  Kearny Financial Corp. must obtain approval
from the Office of Thrift Supervision before acquiring,  directly or indirectly,
more than 5% of the voting stock of another  savings  institution or savings and
loan holding company or acquiring such an institution or holding

                                       101



company by merger,  consolidation  or purchase  of its assets.  Federal law also
prohibits a savings and loan holding  company from  acquiring  more than 5% of a
company engaged in activities  other than those  authorized for savings and loan
holding  companies  by federal  law;  or  acquiring  or  retaining  control of a
depository  institution  that is not  insured by the Federal  Deposit  Insurance
Corporation.  In evaluating an application for Kearny Financial Corp. to acquire
control  of a  savings  institution,  the  Office of  Thrift  Supervision  would
consider the financial and managerial  resources and future  prospects of Kearny
Financial Corp. and the target institution, the effect of the acquisition on the
risk to the insurance  funds, the convenience and the needs of the community and
competitive factors.

         Stock  Holding  Company  Subsidiary  Regulation.  The  Office of Thrift
Supervision  has adopted  regulations  governing  the  two-tier  mutual  holding
company form of  organization  and subsidiary  stock holding  companies that are
controlled  by  mutual  holding   companies.   We  have  adopted  this  form  of
organization and it will continue in place after the proposed  offering.  Kearny
Financial  Corp. is the stock holding  company  subsidiary of Kearny MHC. Kearny
Financial  Corp.  is permitted to engage in  activities  that are  permitted for
Kearny MHC subject to the same restrictions and conditions.

         Waivers  of  Dividends  by Kearny  MHC.  Office  of Thrift  Supervision
regulations require Kearny MHC to notify the Office of Thrift Supervision of any
proposed  waiver of its receipt of dividends  from Kearny  Financial  Corp.  The
Office of Thrift  Supervision  reviews dividend waiver notices on a case-by-case
basis,  and, in  general,  does not object to any such waiver if: (i) the mutual
holding  company's board of directors  determines that such waiver is consistent
with such directors'  fiduciary duties to the mutual holding company's  members;
(ii) for as long as the savings  association  subsidiary  is  controlled  by the
mutual  holding  company,  the dollar  amount of dividends  waived by the mutual
holding  company is considered as a restriction on the retained  earnings of the
savings association,  which restriction, if material, is disclosed in the public
financial  statements  of the  savings  association  as a note to the  financial
statements;  (iii) the  amount of any  dividend  waived  by the  mutual  holding
company is available for  declaration as a dividend solely to the mutual holding
company, and, in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.
5, where the savings association determines that the payment of such dividend to
the mutual holding company is probable, an appropriate dollar amount is recorded
as a  liability;  and (iv) the amount of any waived  dividend is  considered  as
having been paid by the savings  association in evaluating any proposed dividend
under  Office  of  Thrift  Supervision  capital  distribution  regulations.   We
anticipate that Kearny MHC will waive dividends paid by Kearny  Financial Corp.,
if any.

         Conversion  of Kearny MHC to Stock Form.  Office of Thrift  Supervision
regulations permit Kearny MHC to convert from the mutual form of organization to
the capital stock form of  organization,  commonly  referred to as a second step
conversion. In a second step conversion a new holding company would be formed as
the successor to Kearny Financial Corp.,  Kearny MHC's corporate existence would
end, and certain  depositors  of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank would receive the
right to  subscribe  for shares of the new  holding  company.  In a second  step
conversion,  each share of common stock held by  stockholders  other than Kearny
MHC would be automatically  converted into a number of shares of common stock of
the new holding  company  determined  pursuant to an exchange ratio that ensures
that Kearny Financial Corp. stockholders own the same percentage of common stock
in the new holding company as they owned in Kearny  Financial Corp.  immediately
prior  to the  second  step  conversion.  Under  Office  of  Thrift  Supervision
regulations, Kearny Financial Corp. stockholders would not be diluted because of
any dividends waived by Kearny MHC (and waived dividends would not be considered
in determining an appropriate  exchange ratio), in the event Kearny MHC converts
to stock  form.  The  total  number of shares  held by  Kearny  Financial  Corp.
stockholders  after a second  step  conversion  also would be  increased  by any
purchases by Kearny  Financial  Corp.  stockholders in the stock offering of the
new holding company conducted as part of the second step conversion.

                                       102



         Acquisition of Control. Under the federal Change in Bank Control Act, a
notice  must be  submitted  to the  Office of Thrift  Supervision  if any person
(including a company), or group acting in concert, seeks to acquire "control" of
a savings and loan holding  company or savings  association.  An  acquisition of
"control" can occur upon the acquisition of 10% or more of the voting stock of a
savings and loan holding company or savings  institution or as otherwise defined
by the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  Under the Change in Bank Control Act, the
Office of Thrift Supervision has 60 days from the filing of a complete notice to
act,  taking into  consideration  certain  factors,  including the financial and
managerial  resources  of  the  acquirer  and  the  anti-trust  effects  of  the
acquisition.  Any  company  that so  acquires  control  would then be subject to
regulation as a savings and loan holding company.

Federal Securities Laws

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.  has filed with the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission a  registration  statement  under the  Securities Act of 1933 for the
registration  of the common stock to be issued  pursuant to the  offering.  Upon
completion of the offering, Kearny Financial Corp. common stock will continue to
be registered with the Securities and Exchange  Commission  under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. Kearny Financial Corp. will be subject to the information,
proxy  solicitation,  insider trading  restrictions and other requirements under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

                                    TAXATION

Federal Taxation

         Savings  institutions are subject to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, in the same general manner as other corporations.

         All thrift institutions are now subject to the same provisions as banks
with respect to deductions for bad debts.  Thrift  institutions that are treated
as "small banks" (the average  adjusted bases for all assets of such institution
equals $500 million or less) under the Internal Revenue Code may account for bad
debts by using the experience method for determining additions to their bad debt
reserve.  Thrift  institutions  that are not treated as small banks must now use
the specific charge-off method.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.  may exclude from its income 100% of dividends
received  from Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank as a member of the same  affiliated
group of corporations. A 70% dividends received deduction generally applies with
respect to dividends  received  from  corporations  that are not members of such
affiliated group.

         Kearny  Financial Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings Bank have previously
filed  a  consolidated   federal  tax  return  with  Kearny  MHC.  Kearny  MHC's
consolidated  federal income tax returns have not been audited by the IRS during
the past five years.  Following the stock offering,  Kearny  Financial Corp. and
Kearny Federal Savings Bank will file a consolidated  return and Kearny MHC will
file a separate return.

State Taxation

         Kearny Financial Corp. and its subsidiaries  file New Jersey income tax
returns  and are  subject  to a state  income  tax that is  calculated  based on
federal taxable income, subject to certain adjustments. In July 2002, New Jersey
eliminated the 3% tax rate formerly applicable to thrift institutions located in
New

                                       103



Jersey,  and such  institutions are now subject to the 9% tax rate applicable to
New Jersey corporations. Such change was retroactive to January 1, 2002.

         The state  income tax returns of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank have not
been audited during the past five years. For additional information, see Note 15
to the consolidated financial statements beginning on page F-1.

                                   MANAGEMENT

Directors and Executive  Officers of Kearny  Financial  Corp. and Kearny Federal
Savings Bank

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s and Kearny Federal  Savings Bank's Boards of
Directors are both composed of nine  members,  with each director  serving for a
term of three years.  Kearny Financial Corp.'s and Kearny Federal Savings Bank's
bylaws require that directors be divided into three classes,  as nearly equal in
number as possible,  with approximately  one-third of the directors elected each
year.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s and Kearny Federal Savings Bank's  executive
officers are appointed  annually by the respective Boards of Directors and serve
at the Board's  discretion.  However,  several of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank's
officers do have employment agreements, as further described on page 109.

         The  following  table  sets  forth  information  with  respect  to  the
directors and executive  officers of Kearny  Financial  Corp. and Kearny Federal
Savings Bank.



                                   Age at                                                                 Current
                                  June 30,                                                 Director         Term
Name                                2004        Position                                   Since(1)       Expires
----                               ------       --------                                   --------       -------
                                                                                           
Directors
John J. Mazur, Jr.                   50         Chairman                                     1996           2004
John N. Hopkins                      57         Director, President and Chief                2001           2006
                                                Executive Officer                        
Theodore J. Aanensen                 59         Director                                     1986           2005
Matthew T. McClane                   67         Director                                     1994           2004
John F. McGovern                     43         Director                                     1999           2004
Joseph P. Mazza                      60         Director                                     1993           2005
Leopold W. Montanaro(2)              64         Director                                     2003           2006
Henry S. Parow                       81         Director                                     1976           2006
John F. Regan                        59         Director                                     1999           2005
Edward T. Rushforth(3)               87         Director                                     1975           2006


                                          
                                                  
                                       104





                                   Age at                                                                 Current
                                  June 30,                                                 Director         Term
Name                                2004        Position                                   Since(1)       Expires
----                               ------       --------                                   --------       -------
                                                                                           
                                                                              
Executive Officers(4)                                                  
Albert E. Gossweiler                 56         Senior Vice President and                      N/A           N/A
                                                Chief Financial Officer
William C. Ledgerwood                51         Senior Vice President, Treasurer and           N/A           N/A
                                                Chief Accounting Officer
Sharon Jones                         50         Senior Vice President and Corporate            N/A           N/A
                                                Secretary
Patrick M. Joyce                     39         Senior Vice President and Chief                N/A           N/A
                                                Lending Officer
Allan Beardslee                      52         Senior Vice President of Information           N/A           N/A
                                                Technology
Erika Sacher                         39         Senior Vice President and Branch               N/A           N/A
                                                Administrator


----------------------
(1)  Indicates the year the individual first became a director of Kearny Federal
     Savings Bank.  Upon the formation of Kearny  Financial Corp. in March 2001,
     each person  serving as a director at that time of Kearny  Federal  Savings
     Bank became a director of Kearny Financial Corp.
(2)  Mr. Montanaro serves as a director of Kearny Federal Savings Bank only.
(3)  Mr. Rushforth serves as a director of Kearny Financial Corp. and Kearny MHC
     only.
(4)  Mr. Hopkins,  Mr.  Gossweiler,  Mr.  Ledgerwood and Ms. Jones also serve as
     officers of Kearny  Financial  Corp. The other  officers  listed herein are
     officers of Kearny Federal Savings Bank only.

         The business  experience of each of Kearny Financial Corp.'s and Kearny
Federal Savings Bank's directors and executive officers is set forth below. Each
has held his  present  position  for at least  the past  five  years,  except as
otherwise indicated.

Directors

         John J.  Mazur,  Jr. is the sole  owner and  president/chief  executive
officer of Elegant  Desserts,  a  wholesale  bakery  located in  Lyndhurst,  New
Jersey,  that sells gourmet cakes nationally and on QVC. He opened this business
in 1994. From 1976 to 2003, he was also a partner and general manager of Mazur's
Bakery, a retail bakery in Lyndhurst,  New Jersey, that operated from 1936 until
it was sold in 2003.  He became  chairman of the Board of Directors of Kearny in
January 2004.

         John N. Hopkins became president and chief executive  officer of Kearny
MHC,  Kearny  Financial Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings Bank in 2002 and served
the Bank  previously as executive  vice president from 1994 to 2002 and as chief
financial  officer  from 1994 to 1999.  He has been  employed by Kearny  Federal
Savings  Bank since 1975.  He is a graduate of Fairleigh  Dickinson  University.
Active in  professional  and  charitable  organizations,  he  serves on  several
committees of the New Jersey League of Community Bankers; the board of directors
of the Thrift Institutions  Community  Investment Corp. of NJ (TICIC), the board
of trustees of Clara Maass  Medical  Center,  the board of trustees of the Saint
Barnabas  Health Care System and the Rutherford  Senior  Citizens Center (55 Kip
Center).

         Theodore J. Aanensen is an owner and president of Aanensen's,  a luxury
home remodeling and custom  cabinetry  company  established in Kearny in 1951. A
graduate of Upsala  College in 1966, he has been  president of Aanensen's  since
1982.

                                       105



         Joseph  P.  Mazza  is a  graduate  of  Seton  Hall  University  and The
University  of  Pennsylvania.  He  is  a  self-employed  dentist  practicing  in
Rutherford,  New  Jersey,  since  1971.  He  also  serves  on the  Board  of the
Rutherford Senior Citizens Center.

         Matthew T. McClane  retired in 2002.  He was appointed to president and
chief executive officer of Kearny Federal Savings Bank in 1994 and president and
chief executive officer of Kearny MHC and Kearny Financial Corp. in 2001. He was
employed by Kearny Federal Savings Bank from 1967 to 2002.

         John F. McGovern is the owner of McGovern  Monuments,  a monument sales
and lettering  company located in North  Arlington,  New Jersey that has been in
business  since 1924.  He has also worked as a  self-employed  certified  public
accountant  and  certified  financial  planner  since  1984 and as a  registered
investment advisor since 2001.

         Leopold W.  Montanaro is retired and was the  chairman,  president  and
chief executive officer of West Essex Bancorp, Inc. and West Essex Bank, located
in Caldwell,  New Jersey, until such bank was acquired by Kearny Financial Corp.
on July 1,  2003.  He was  employed  by West  Essex  Bank  from  1972  until the
completion  of the merger  with  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank.  He serves as a
director  of  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank  but not as a  director  of  Kearny
Financial Corp. or Kearny MHC.

         Henry S. Parow is a graduate  of Seton Hall  College.  He is a licensed
funeral  director  in the state of New Jersey  since  1950.  He is the  original
owner,  director and manager of the Parow Funeral  Home,  North  Arlington,  New
Jersey,  since 1957. He currently is on the Board of Directors of Kearny Federal
Savings Bank, Kearny MHC and Kearny Financial Corp.

         John F. Regan has been the majority  stockholder  and  president of two
automobile sales and service companies,  DeMassi Pontiac, Buick and GMC, located
in  Riverdale,  New Jersey  and Regan  Pontiac,  Buick and GMC,  located in Long
Island City, New York since 1995.

         Edward T.  Rushforth  is  retired.  He was a florist and the owner of a
retail  floral  business that he sold in 1977. He served as a director of Kearny
Federal  Savings  Bank until 2003 and now  serves  only as a director  of Kearny
Financial Corp. and Kearny MHC.

Executive Officers

         Albert E.  Gossweiler  became senior vice president and chief financial
officer of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank in 1999 and of Kearny  Financial  Corp.
upon its formation in 2001. He was  previously  employed by South Bergen Savings
Bank and joined  Kearny when such bank was  acquired by Kearny  Federal  Savings
Bank in 1999.  He was employed by South Bergen  Savings Bank from 1981 until the
completion of the merger with Kearny Federal Savings Bank.

         William C. Ledgerwood  became the senior vice president,  treasurer and
chief  accounting  officer of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank and Kearny  Financial
Corp. in 2002 and has been employed by Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank since 1998.
He was previously the chief  financial  officer for The Jersey Bank for Savings,
which  opened as a de novo stock bank in 1989 and was  acquired  by  Interchange
Bank in 1998.

         Sharon Jones is the corporate secretary of Kearny MHC, Kearny Financial
Corp.  and Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank.  She was  appointed  to the office of
corporate  secretary in 1997 and became a senior vice president in 2002. She has
been employed by Kearny Federal Savings Bank since 1972.

                                       106



         Patrick M. Joyce  became the senior vice  president  and chief  lending
officer of Kearny Federal Savings Bank in 2002 and was previously vice president
of loan originations from 1999 to 2002. He was formerly employed by South Bergen
Savings  Bank  as an  assistant  corporate  secretary  and as a loan  originator
starting in 1989. He joined  Kearny when South Bergen  Savings Bank was acquired
by Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank in 1999 and was employed by such bank from 1985
until the completion of the merger with Kearny Federal Savings Bank.

         Allan Beardslee became senior vice president of information  technology
for  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank in 2002 and  prior to that was  senior  vice
president  of  operations  beginning  in 1982.  He has been  employed  by Kearny
Federal Savings Bank since 1975.

         Erika   Sacher  has  been  the  senior   vice   president   and  branch
administrator  of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank since 2002 and was  previously a
vice  president  and branch  administrator  from 1999 to 2002.  She was formerly
employed  by  South  Bergen   Savings  Bank  as  a  vice  president  and  branch
administrator  and joined  Kearny when such bank was acquired by Kearny  Federal
Savings Bank in 1999.  She was  employed by South Bergen  Savings Bank from 1991
until the completion of the merger with Kearny Federal Savings Bank.

Meetings and Committees of the Board of Directors

         The Board of Directors  conducts its business  through  meetings of the
Board and through  activities  of its  committees.  During the fiscal year ended
June 30, 2004,  the Board of Directors  met twelve times.  No director  attended
fewer than 75% of the total meetings of the Board of Directors and committees on
which he served  during the year ended June 30,  2004.  The Board  maintains  an
Audit & Compliance  Committee,  a Budget Committee,  an Executive Committee,  an
Interest  Rate  Risk  Management  Committee,   an  Asset  Quality  Committee,  a
Nominating  Committee  and a  Compensation  Committee,  as well as a  Building &
Grounds Committee, a Governance Committee, a Planning & Marketing Committee,  an
Electronic  Data  Processing   Committee  and  a  Benefits   Equalization   Plan
Administrative Committee.

         The  Audit  &  Compliance  Committee  consists  of  Directors  McGovern
(Chair),  Mazur,  Mazza  and  Regan.  Each  member  of the  Audit  Committee  is
independent in accordance with the listing standards of the Nasdaq Stock Market.
The Board of Directors has  designated  John F.  McGovern as an audit  committee
financial expert under the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission. This
committee meets monthly and also  periodically  with the internal  auditor,  the
compliance officer and the external auditors. This committee's  responsibilities
include oversight of the internal audit and regulatory compliance activities and
monitoring  management and employee  compliance  with the Board's audit policies
and applicable laws and regulations.  This committee is directly responsible for
the  appointment,  compensation,  retention  and  oversight  of the  work of the
external  auditors.  This  committees  operates under a written  charter,  which
governs its composition, responsibilities and operations.

         The  Compensation  Committee  consists of Directors  Aanensen  (Chair),
Mazur, Mazza and Parow. This committee meets as needed. The  responsibilities of
this committee include appraisal of the performance of officers,  administration
of   management   incentive   compensation   plans  and  review  of   directors'
compensation.  This committee reviews industry  compensation surveys and reviews
the  recommendations  of  management  on  employee  compensation  matters.  This
committees  operates  under a written  charter,  which governs its  composition,
responsibilities and operations.

         The  Nominating  Committee,  consisting  of  Directors  Mazza  (Chair),
Aanensen, Parow, Regan and Rushforth, is responsible for the annual selection of
management's nominees for election as directors.

                                       107



Each member of the Nominating  Committee is  independent in accordance  with the
listing standards of the Nasdaq Stock Market.  This committees  operates under a
written charter, which governs its composition, responsibilities and operations.

         Kearny  Financial  Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings Bank have adopted a
code of ethics,  which  applies to all  employees  and  directors  and addresses
compliance with applicable laws,  rules and  regulations.  The code of ethics is
designed to deter wrongdoing and to promote honest and ethical conduct, full and
accurate   disclosure  and  compliance  with  all  applicable  laws,  rules  and
regulations.

Director Compensation

         Board Fees.  Directors  are  currently  paid a fee of $1,250 per Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank board meeting  attended,  $600 per Kearny  Financial Corp.
meeting attended and $600 per Kearny MHC meeting  attended.  The chairman of the
board receives a higher fee of $1,500,  $720 and $720, for bank, holding company
and mutual holding company meetings, respectively.

         Members of the Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank  Executive  Committee  are
currently paid $1,200 per committee meeting attended;  the chairman of the board
receives a higher fee of $1,440 for Executive Committee meetings. Each member of
the  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank Board of  Directors  is also a member of the
Executive  Committee.  Members  of the  Audit  &  Compliance  Committee  and the
chairman  of this  committee  are paid  $250 and  $350,  respectively,  for each
meeting attended. Members of the Compensation Committee and the chairman of this
committee are paid $250 and $300,  respectively,  for each meeting attended. The
Administrative  Building  Construction  Committee  and the Branch  Renovation  &
Construction  Committee are ad hoc committees,  and members of these  committees
are paid $250 per meeting attended.

         Directors  also  receive an annual  retainer  as  follows:  $30,000 for
service on Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's board,  $6,000 for service on Kearny
Financial  Corp.'s  board and $6,000  for  service on Kearny  MHC's  board.  The
aggregate  fees paid to the  directors  for the year  ended  June 30,  2004 were
$594,850.  Directors who also serve as employees do not receive  compensation as
directors.  Effective January 1, 2005, the annual retainers will be increased to
$32,000 for service on Kearny Federal  Savings Bank's board,  $9,000 for service
on Kearny Financial Corp.'s board and $9,000 for service on Kearny MHC's board.

         Directors Consultation and Retirement Plan. Kearny Federal Savings Bank
maintains a Directors  Consultation  and Retirement Plan (the "DCRP").  The DCRP
provides  retirement benefits to the directors of the Bank based upon the number
of years of service to the Bank's  board.  To be  eligible  to receive  benefits
under the DCRP,  a director  generally  must have  completed at least 5 years of
service and must not retire from the board prior to reaching 60 years of age. If
a director  agrees to become a  consulting  director  to the  Bank's  board upon
retirement,  he will receive a monthly payment equal to 2.5% of the Bank's Board
fee in  effect  during  the  12-month  period  prior to the  date of  retirement
multiplied by the number of years of service as a director, not to exceed 80% of
Board  fee  compensation.  Benefits  under  the  DCRP  begin  upon a  director's
retirement  and are paid for  life;  provided,  however,  that in the event of a
director's  death prior to the receipt of 120 monthly  payments,  payments shall
continue to the  director's  surviving  spouse or estate until 120 payments have
been made.  In the event  there is a change in control (as defined in the DCRP),
all directors will be presumed to be eligible to receive benefits under the DCRP
and each  director will receive a lump sum payment equal to the present value of
future  benefits  payable.  Benefits under the DCRP are unvested and forfeitable
until  retirement  at or  after  age 60  with  at  least  5  years  of  service,
termination of service  following a change in control,  disability  following at
least 5 years

                                       108



of service or death. For the year ended June 30, 2004, payments made by the Bank
under the DCRP totaled $89,314.

Executive Compensation

         Summary Compensation Table. The following table sets forth the cash and
non-cash  compensation  awarded to or earned by Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s Chief
Executive Officer and certain other officers of Kearny Financial Corp. or Kearny
Federal Savings Bank for the year ended December 31, 2003. All  compensation was
paid by Kearny Federal Savings Bank.




                                                                      Annual Compensation(1)
                                                                      ----------------------
                                                                                                       All Other
Name and Principal Position                         Year               Salary             Bonus       Compensation
---------------------------                        ------              ------             -----       ------------
                                                                                               
John N. Hopkins, President and                      2003              $335,000          $103,450        $6,381(2)
Chief Executive Officer

Allan Beardslee, Senior Vice President              2003               173,000            61,610         6,007(3)
and EDP Officer

Albert E. Gossweiler, Senior Vice                   2003               173,000            57,110         6,042(4)
President and Chief Financial Officer

Sharon Jones, Senior Vice President                 2003               147,500            55,825         4,785(5)
and Corporate Secretary

William C. Ledgerwood, Senior Vice                  2003               135,000            59,950         4,247(6)
President, Treasurer and Chief
Accounting Officer


--------------
(1)  Compensation  information for the years ended December 31, 2002 and 2001 is
     omitted because Kearny  Financial  Corp. was not a reporting  company under
     Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 during those
     periods.  Kearny provides  certain of its executive  officers with non-cash
     benefits  and  perquisites,  such as the use of  company-  owned or  leased
     vehicles.  The aggregate value of such non-cash benefits for the year ended
     December  31,  2003 did not  exceed  the  lesser of  $50,000  or 10% of the
     aggregate salary and bonus for any officer.
(2)  Consists of an employer  contribution to the 401(k) Plan for Mr. Hopkins of
     $4,059 and $2,322 for payment of life insurance premium.
(3)  Consists of an employer  contribution to the 401(k) Plan for Mr.  Beardslee
     of $5,190 and $817 for payment of life insurance premium.
(4)  Consists of an employer  contribution to the 401(k) Plan for Mr. Gossweiler
     of $4,515 and $1,527 for payment of life insurance premium.
(5)  Consists of an employer  contribution  to the 401(k) Plan for Ms.  Jones of
     $4,342 and $443 for payment of life insurance premium.
(6)  Consists of an employer  contribution to the 401(k) Plan for Mr. Ledgerwood
     of $3,640 and $607 for payment of life insurance premium.

         Employment Agreements.  Kearny Federal Savings Bank has entered into an
employment agreement with Mr. Hopkins, pursuant to which his minimum base salary
is $450,000.  Mr. Hopkins' employment agreement has a term of three years, which
commenced on July 1, 2004, and may be extended on or before each  anniversary of
the  effective  date  upon  determination  of the Board of  Directors  of Kearny
Federal Savings Bank that his performance has met the requirements and standards
of the Board. Pursuant to the terms of Mr. Hopkins' employment agreement,  he is
generally  entitled to participate  in all  discretionary  bonuses,  pension and
other  retirement  benefit  plans,  welfare  benefit  plans  and  other  equity,
incentive and benefit plans and  privileges  applicable to senior  management of
Kearny Federal Savings

                                       109



Bank. Upon his  termination of employment at any time on or after  attainment of
age 62 and until he becomes  eligible  for  Medicare  coverage,  Mr.  Hopkins is
permitted to continue to participate,  at Kearny Federal Savings Bank's expense,
in the group medical plan sponsored by the Bank.

         If Kearny Federal  Savings Bank  terminates Mr. Hopkins without "cause"
as defined in the agreement,  he will be entitled to (i) a  continuation  of his
salary from the date of termination through the remaining term of the agreement,
and (ii) during the same period, the cost of obtaining health, life,  disability
and other benefits at levels  substantially  equal to those provided on the date
of  termination  of  employment.   If  Mr.  Hopkins'  employment  is  terminated
involuntarily  during the term of the agreement following a "change in control,"
as defined in the agreement,  of Kearny Federal Savings Bank or Kearny Financial
Corp. or without cause within  twenty-four months following a change in control,
he will be paid an amount  equal to 2.999  times his  five-year  average  annual
taxable cash compensation in a lump sum and be entitled to continued medical and
dental coverage for the remainder of the term. Mr. Hopkins will also be entitled
to the  foregoing  change  in  control  severance  payment  and  benefits  if he
voluntarily  terminates his employment  within 120 days following certain events
during the term of the agreement following a change in control of Kearny Federal
Savings Bank or Kearny Financial Corp. or within  twenty-four months following a
change in control.  All amounts  payable as  severance in respect of a change in
control will be reduced to the extent  necessary  such that neither the payments
under the  employment  agreement,  nor any other  payments,  constitute  "excess
parachute  payments" under Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended.  If a change  in  control  payment  had been  made  under  Mr.  Hopkins
agreement as of September 30, 2004, the payment would have equaled approximately
$818,240.

         Kearny Federal Savings Bank has also entered into employment agreements
with Senior Vice Presidents Beardslee,  Gossweiler, Jones, Joyce, Ledgerwood and
Sacher  providing  for a minimum  base salary of $183,000,  $183,000,  $156,500,
$165,000, $170,000 and $170,000, respectively. These agreements each have a term
of two years,  which  commenced on July 1, 2004, and each provides for extension
of  the  term  on  or  before  each  anniversary  of  the  effective  date  upon
determination  of the Board of Directors of Kearny Federal Savings Bank that the
officer's  performance has met its requirements  and standards.  Pursuant to the
terms of the  employment  agreements,  each  officer is  generally  entitled  to
participate in all discretionary  bonuses,  pension and other retirement benefit
plans,  welfare benefit plans and other equity,  incentive and benefit plans and
privileges  applicable to senior management of Kearny Federal Savings Bank. Upon
termination of employment at any time on or after attainment of age 62 and until
eligibility  for Medicare  coverage,  each of the officers is also  permitted to
continue to participate,  at Kearny Federal Savings Bank's expense, in the group
medical plan sponsored by the Bank.

         If terminated without cause, each of these officers will be entitled to
(i) a  continuation  of his or her  salary  through  the  remaining  term of the
agreement,  and (ii) during the same period, the cost of obtaining health, life,
disability and other benefits at levels substantially equal to those provided on
the date of termination of employment.  If terminated  involuntarily  during the
term of the  agreement  following  a "change  in  control,"  as  defined  in the
agreement,  of Kearny Federal Savings Bank or Kearny  Financial Corp. or without
cause within  twenty-four  months  following a change in control,  each of these
officers  will be paid an amount equal to 2.0 times his or her most recent total
annual compensation (including the value of deferred compensation and retirement
plans) in a lump sum and be entitled to  continued  medical and dental  coverage
for the remainder of the term. Each of the officers will also be entitled to the
foregoing  change in control  severance  payment and  benefits  upon a voluntary
termination of employment  within 120 days  following  certain events during the
term of the agreement  following a change in control of Kearny  Federal  Savings
Bank or Kearny Financial Corp. or within  twenty-four  months following a change
in control.  All amounts  payable to any of the officers as severance in respect
of a change in control will be reduced to the extent necessary such that neither
the payments under the employment agreement, nor any

                                       110



other payments, constitute "excess parachute payments" under Section 280G of the
Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended.  If change in control  payments had
been made under these  agreements as of September 30, 2004,  the payments  would
have equaled approximately $481,000,  $472,000, $416,000, $374,000, $398,000 and
$328,000  for  Senior  Vice  Presidents  Beardslee,  Gossweiler,  Jones,  Joyce,
Ledgerwood and Sacher, respectively.

         Additionally,  at September 30, 2004,  Kearny Federal  Savings Bank had
change in control  severance  arrangements  with forty-one other officers of the
Bank  providing  for  payment  of one  times  their  most  recent  total  annual
compensation (including the value of deferred compensation and retirement plans)
if terminated  within  twenty-four  months  following a change in control.  Such
agreements are currently effective through May 2006.

         As of September 30, 2004,  Kearny Federal Savings Bank also sponsored a
change in control  severance pay plan,  which provides for payments in the event
of involuntary  termination  without cause within 12 months of consummation of a
merger or change of  control.  The amount of such  payments  is equal to two and
one-half  weeks  salary for every year or partial  year of service  with  Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank, with a minimum benefit equal to two and one-half weeks of
salary and a maximum benefit equal to 100 weeks of salary. If the other party to
the  transaction  sponsors a more generous  severance pay plan,  the employee is
entitled to receive  the amount of payments  payable  under such  party's  plan.
Employees  who are  subject  to  employment,  change  in  control  or  severance
agreements are not entitled to benefits under his plan.

Benefit Plans

         401(k)  Savings and Profit Sharing Plan.  Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank
sponsors a tax-qualified  defined  contribution  savings plan for the benefit of
its employees. Employees become eligible to participate under the 401(k) Plan on
the  first  day of the  month  coincident  with  or  immediately  following  the
completion of twelve  months of service and the  attainment of age 21. Under the
401(k) Plan,  employees  may  voluntarily  elect to defer  between 1% and 75% of
compensation,  not to exceed  applicable limits under the Internal Revenue Code.
Employees  age 50 and over may make catch-up  contributions,  which for calendar
year 2003 were  limited to $2,000.  In  addition,  the 401(k) Plan  provides for
dollar-for- dollar employer matching contributions up to a maximum of 3% of such
person's  salary  for each  participant  under the  401(k)  Plan.  Employee  and
employer  matching  contributions  are immediately 100% vested.  The 401(k) Plan
will be amended  for  participants  under the  401(k)  Plan to be able to direct
401(k) Plan assets to be invested in the stock of Kearny  Financial Corp. in the
offering.  Such  directed  investment  of 401(k) Plan assets will be  determined
based upon each  individual's  subscription  rights as  eligible  depositors  of
Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank at the  eligibility  record date and  supplemental
eligibility record date set for the offering.

         It is intended that the 401(k) Plan will operate in compliance with the
provisions of the Employee  Retirement  Income Security Act of 1974, as amended,
and  the   requirements  of  Section  401(a)  of  the  Internal   Revenue  Code.
Contributions  to the 401(k) Plan for  employees may be reduced in the future or
eliminated as a result of  contributions  made to the Employee  Stock  Ownership
Plan. See Management - Potential  Stock Benefit Plans - Employee Stock Ownership
Plan on page 113.

         Pension Plan.  Kearny Federal Savings Bank is a participating  employer
in a  multiple-employer  pension plan  sponsored by the  Financial  Institutions
Retirement Fund (the "Pension  Plan").  All full-time  employees of the Bank are
eligible to  participate  after one year of service and  attainment of age 21. A
qualifying employee becomes fully vested in the Pension Plan upon the earlier of
completion of five years

                                       111



service  or  attainment  of normal  retirement  age of 65. The  Pension  Plan is
intended to comply with the Employee  Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as
amended ("ERISA").

         The Pension Plan  provides for monthly  payments to each  participating
employee at normal  retirement  age. A participant  who is vested in the Pension
Plan may take an early retirement and elect to receive a reduced monthly benefit
beginning as early as age 45. The Pension Plan also provides for payments in the
event of disability or death.

         The annual  benefit  amount upon  retirement  at age 65 equals 2% times
years of  service  times a  participant's  highest  five  year  average  salary.
Benefits  are  payable in the form of a monthly  retirement  benefit and a death
benefit or an alternative form that is actuarially equivalent.  At September 30,
2004, Officers Hopkins,  Gossweiler,  Ledgerwood,  Sacher, Joyce,  Beardslee and
Jones  had 28 years,  21 years,  5 years,  12 years,  18 years,  28 years and 31
years,  respectively,  of  credited  service  under the  Pension  Plan and had a
current  highest  five year  average  salary of  $283,000,  $159,000,  $121,000,
$115,000, $104,000, $166,000 and $140,000, respectively.

         We  anticipate  higher  benefits  costs during the  remainder of fiscal
2005, as we expect to contribute significantly more to fund the employee pension
plan.

         Benefit  Equalization  Plan.  Kearny Federal Savings Bank has adopted a
Benefit  Equalization  Plan (the "BEP").  The purpose of the BEP is to provide a
pension  benefit based upon the actual  earnings of senior  officers of the Bank
(President,   Executive   Vice   Presidents,   Vice   Presidents  and  Corporate
Secretaries)  in the event  that  their  average  annual  earnings  exceeds  the
permissible pensionable earnings level under the Pension Plan as required by the
limitations  of Sections  401(a)(17)  and 415 of the Internal  Revenue Code. The
supplemental  pension for President and Chief Executive  Officer John N. Hopkins
and other  senior  officers  whose  highest five year annual  earnings  prior to
retirement  will  include  years in which  such  earnings  exceed  the limits of
Sections  401(a)(17)  and  415 of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  will  receive  a
supplemental  benefit based upon the difference  between their average  earnings
taking  into effect  this  maximum  pensionable  earnings  limitation  and their
average earnings without regard to such limitation, multiplied by 2% times their
years of service at  retirement.  The benefits  payment under the BEP will be in
the form of an annual benefit  payable for life and a death benefit,  unless the
committee  administering  the BEP  authorizes  an  alternative  form of benefit.
During the year ended June 30, 2004, there was approximately $59,000 of benefits
paid to retired  participants  under the BEP.  For the year ended June 30, 2004,
financial reporting expense accrued under the BEP totaled $207,000.

         The following table sets forth the estimated  annual  benefits  payable
under the Pension Plan and the Benefit  Equalization  Plan described above, upon
retirement  at age 65 as of  June  30,  2004,  expressed  in the  form of a life
annuity,  for the average annual  earnings  described above and years of service
specified.  Such  amounts are in addition to any benefits  payable  under Social
Security.


                      Creditable Years of Service at Age 65
   Average
Annual Wages            15            20            25          30          35
------------        ----------    -----------   ----------   ---------   -------
    $  25,000       $  7,500      $ 10,000      $ 12,500   $ 15,000     $ 17,500
       50,000         15,000        20,000        25,000     30,000       35,000
       75,000         22,500        30,000        37,500     45,000       52,500
      100,000         30,000        40,000        50,000     60,000       70,000
      150,000         50,000        60,000        75,000     90,000      105,000
      200,000         60,000        80,000       100,000    120,000      140,000
      300,000         90,000       120,000       150,000    180,000      210,000
      400,000        120,000       160,000       200,000    240,000      280,000
      550,000        165,000       220,000       275,000    330,000      385,000


                                      112



         Group Term Life  Insurance  Plan.  Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank has a
post-retirement  group term life insurance plan covering all eligible employees.
Benefits  are based on age and years of service.  During the year ended June 30,
2004, there was approximately  $6,000 contributed to and benefit paid under this
plan.

         Compensation  Committee  Interlocks  and  Insider  Participation.   The
Compensation  Committee  during  the year  ended  June 30,  2004,  consisted  of
Directors Aanensen (Chair),  Mazur, Mazza and Parow.  During the year ended June
30, 2004,  Kearny Financial Corp. had no  "interlocking"  relationships in which
(i) an executive  officer of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  served as a member of the
compensation committee of another entity, one of whose executive officers served
on the  compensation  committee  of Kearny  Financial  Corp.;  (ii) an executive
officer of Kearny Financial Corp. served as a director of another entity, one of
whose  executive  officers  served  on  the  compensation  committee  of  Kearny
Financial Corp.; and (iii) an executive officer of Kearny Financial Corp. served
as a member  of the  compensation  committee  of  another  entity,  one of whose
executive officers served as a director of Kearny Financial Corp.

Potential Stock Benefit Plans

         Employee Stock Ownership Plan. We intend to establish an employee stock
ownership plan for the exclusive  benefit of  participating  employees of Kearny
Federal Savings Bank, to be implemented prior to the completion of the offering.
Participating  employees are  employees who have  completed at least one year of
service  and  have  attained  the age of 21.  An  application  for a  letter  of
determination  as to the  tax-qualified  status of the employee stock  ownership
plan will be  submitted  to the IRS.  Although no  assurances  can be given,  we
expect that the employee stock ownership plan will receive a favorable letter of
determination from the IRS.

         The employee stock ownership plan is to be funded by contributions made
by Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank in cash or common  stock.  Benefits may be paid
either in shares of the common stock or in cash. The plan will borrow funds with
which to acquire up to 8% of the shares sold in the offering. The employee stock
ownership  plan may elect,  in whole or in part,  to fill its order through open
market  purchases  subsequent  to the  closing of the  offering,  subject to any
required  regulatory  approval.  The employee  stock  ownership  plan intends to
borrow funds from Kearny  Financial  Corp. The loan is expected to be for a term
of ten years at an annual  interest rate equal to the prime rate as published in
The Wall Street  Journal.  Presently it is  anticipated  that the employee stock
ownership  plan will purchase up to 8% of the shares sold in the  offering.  The
loan will be secured by the shares  purchased  and  earnings of  employee  stock
ownership  plan assets.  Shares  purchased  with loan proceeds will be held in a
suspense account for allocation among  participants as the loan is repaid. It is
anticipated that all contributions will be tax-deductible.

         Contributions  to the employee stock ownership plan and shares released
from the suspense  account will be allocated among  participants on the basis of
base  compensation.  All participants must be employed at least 1,000 hours in a
plan  year,  or  have  terminated  employment  following  death,  disability  or
retirement, in order to receive an allocation. Participant benefits become fully
vested in plan allocations  following five years of service.  Employment service
before the adoption of the employee  stock  ownership plan shall be credited for
the purposes of vesting.  Contributions  to the employee stock ownership plan by
Kearny Federal Savings Bank are  discretionary  and as a result benefits payable
under this plan cannot be estimated.

                                       113



         The Board of Directors has appointed  the  non-employee  directors to a
committee that will  administer the plan and serve as the plan's  trustees.  The
trustees  must vote all  allocated  shares  held in the plan as directed by plan
participants.  Unallocated  shares  and  allocated  shares  for  which no timely
direction is received will be voted as directed by the Board of Directors or the
plan's committee, subject to the trustees' fiduciary duties.

         Benefits  Equalization  Plan for Employee Stock Ownership  Plan.  Along
with the  implementation  of the employee stock ownership  plan,  Kearny Federal
Savings Bank will  implement a benefits  equalization  plan related to this plan
for its senior officers.  The  participants  under this plan will be the same as
the  participants  under the  benefits  equalization  plan related to the Kearny
Federal  Savings  Bank's  Pension  Plan.  This plan will  provide  participating
executives  with benefits  otherwise  limited under the employee stock ownership
plan by Sections 401(a)(17) and 415 of the Internal Revenue Code.  Specifically,
the plan will  provide  benefits to officers  that cannot be provided  under the
employee stock  ownership  plan as a result of  limitations  imposed by Sections
401(a)(17)  and 415 of the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  but that  would  have been
provided under the employee stock ownership plan, but for these Internal Revenue
Code  limitations.  For  example,  this plan will  provide  participants  with a
benefit  for any  compensation  that  they may earn in excess  of  $205,000  (as
indexed)  comparable  to the  benefits  earned  by all  participants  under  the
employee stock ownership plan for compensation  earned below that level.  Kearny
Federal Savings Bank may utilize a grantor trust in connection with this plan in
order to set aside funds that  ultimately  may be used to pay benefits under the
plan.  The  assets of the  grantor  trust will  remain  subject to the claims of
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's  general  creditors in the event of insolvency,
until paid to a participant following termination of employment according to the
terms of the  plan.  Benefits  under  the plan will be paid in a lump sum in the
form of common stock of Kearny Financial Corp. to the extent  permissible  under
applicable  regulations,  or in the  alternative,  benefits will be paid in cash
based upon the value of such common stock at the time that such benefit payments
are made. The actual value of benefits under this plan and the annual  financial
reporting  expense  associated with this plan will be calculated  annually based
upon  a  variety  of  factors,  including  the  actual  value  of  benefits  for
participants  determined  under the employee stock ownership plan each year, the
applicable  limitations  under the  Internal  Revenue  Code that are  subject to
adjustment annually and the salary of each participant at such time.  Generally,
benefits  under  the plan will be  taxable  to each  participant  at the time of
receipt of such  payment,  and Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank will  recognize  a
tax-deductible compensation expense at such time.

         Stock  Option  Plan.  We  intend to adopt a stock  option  plan for the
benefit  of  directors  and  officers  after the  passage of at least six months
following the completion of the offering.  Under the current  regulations of the
Office of  Thrift  Supervision,  the stock  option  plan must be  approved  by a
majority of the total votes eligible to be cast by our stockholders,  other than
Kearny  MHC,  unless we obtain a waiver  from the  Office of Thrift  Supervision
allowing  approval by a majority of votes  cast,  other than by Kearny MHC.  The
plan and the  approval of the plan will  comply with all of the then  applicable
Office  of Thrift  Supervision  regulations.  Up to 4.9% of the total  number of
shares of common stock to be issued in the offering to public  stockholders  and
Kearny  MHC will be  reserved  for  issuance  under the stock  option  plan.  No
determinations  have been made as to any  specific  grants to be made  under the
stock option plan or the terms thereof.  In accordance with the  requirements of
our  charter,  any stock  option plan adopted will be subject to approval of the
holders  of a  majority  of the  shares  eligible  to be voted at a  stockholder
meeting.

         The  purpose of the stock  option  plan will be to  attract  and retain
qualified  personnel in key  positions,  provide  officers and directors  with a
proprietary  interest in Kearny Financial Corp. as an incentive to contribute to
our success and reward  directors  and  officers  for  outstanding  performance.
Although the terms of the stock option plan have not yet been determined,  it is
expected  that the stock  option plan will provide for the grant of: (1) options
to purchase the common stock intended to qualify

                                       114



as incentive  stock options  under the Internal  Revenue Code  (incentive  stock
options);  and (2) options that do not so qualify (non-incentive stock options).
The exercise price of any options will be not less than the fair market value of
the common stock on the date of grant.  Any stock option plan would be in effect
for up to 10 years  following  the earlier of adoption by the Board of Directors
or approval by the  stockholders.  Options  would  expire no later than 10 years
following the date granted and would expire  earlier if the option  committee so
determines  or in the  event of  termination  of  employment.  Options  would be
granted  based  upon  several  factors,  including  seniority,  job  duties  and
responsibilities and job performance.

         The Financial  Accounting Standards Board has announced a change in the
required accounting methods applicable to stock options effective after June 15,
2005.  Under such  accounting  requirements,  we will be required  to  recognize
compensation  expense related to stock options  outstanding  based upon the fair
value of such  awards at the date of grant over the period  that such awards are
earned. In preparing the pro forma  information  presented on pages 24 to 30, we
assumed that compensation  expense would be recognized on a straight-line  basis
over the 5-year vesting period.  The new accounting  guidance does not, however,
require that we use a  straight-line  basis to recognize  the expense and we may
use a different method. Additionally, our pro forma information assumes that the
options would vest at a rate of 20% per year, and the options may vest at a rate
other than 20% per year.

         Restricted  Stock Plan. We also intend to establish a restricted  stock
plan to provide our officers and directors with a proprietary interest in Kearny
Financial  Corp.  after  the  passage  of at  least  six  months  following  the
completion of the offering. The restricted stock plan is expected to provide for
the award of common stock, subject to vesting restrictions, to eligible officers
and  directors.   Under  the  current   regulations  of  the  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision,  the stock  option plan must be approved by a majority of the total
votes eligible to be cast by our stockholders,  other than Kearny MHC, unless we
obtain a waiver  from the Office of Thrift  Supervision  allowing  approval by a
majority of votes cast,  other than by Kearny MHC.  The plan and the approval of
the  plan  will  comply  with  all of  the  then  applicable  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision regulations.

         We expect to contribute  funds to the restricted stock plan to acquire,
in the  aggregate,  up to 1.96% of the total  number  of shares of common  stock
issued in the  offering to public  stockholders  and Kearny MHC.  Shares used to
fund the restricted  stock plan may be acquired through open market purchases or
provided from authorized but unissued shares. No  determinations  have been made
as to the specific terms of the restricted stock plan.

         Dilution.  While our  intention  is to fund the stock  option  plan and
restricted  stock  plan  through  open  market   purchases,   stockholders  will
experience  a  reduction  or  dilution  in  ownership  interest if the plans are
instead funded with newly-issued shares.

         The  issuance  of  authorized  but  unissued  shares  of  stock  to the
restricted  stock plan instead of open market  purchases would dilute the voting
interests of existing stockholders by approximately 1.92%.

         The issuance of  authorized  but unissued  shares of stock to the stock
option plan instead of open market  purchases would dilute the voting  interests
of existing stockholders by approximately 4.67%.

Transactions with Management and Others

         Other  than  through  loans  with  Kearny  Federal   Savings  Bank,  no
directors,  executive  officers or their immediate  family members were engaged,
directly or indirectly, in transactions with Kearny Financial

                                       115



Corp. or any subsidiary  exceeding $60,000 during the three years ended June 30,
2004 or the three months ended September 30, 2004.

         Kearny Federal Savings Bank makes loans to its officers,  directors and
employees in the ordinary  course of business.  Such loans are on  substantially
the same terms and conditions as those of comparable  transactions prevailing at
the time with other persons. Such loans also do not include more than the normal
risk of collectibility or present other unfavorable features.

Proposed Stock Purchases by Management

         While no formal decisions have been made,  preliminary  indications are
that  Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  directors  and  executive  officers  and their
associates  will purchase  approximately  573,000  shares of common stock in the
offering,  which  represents  1.2%,  1.0% and  0.9% of the  total  shares  to be
outstanding  after the  offering  at the  minimum,  midpoint  and maximum of the
offering range, respectively.

         The following  table sets forth for each of the directors and executive
officers of Kearny  Financial Corp.  (including in each case all "associates" of
the directors and executive officers) the number of shares of common stock which
each director and officer have preliminarily  indicated they intend to purchase.
The table does not include  purchases by the employee  stock  ownership plan and
does not take into account any stock benefit  plans to be adopted  following the
stock offering. See Management - Potential Stock Benefit Plans on page 113.



                                  Total                             Percentage of           Percentage of         Percentage of
                                Number of      Total Dollar       Total Outstanding       Total Outstanding     Total Outstanding
                                  Shares         Amount of            Shares at               Shares at             Shares at
                                  to be        Shares to be        Minimum of the          Midpoint of the        Maximum of the
            Name                Purchased        Purchased        Offering Range(1)       Offering Range(2)     Offering Range(3)
            ----                ---------        ---------        --------------          --------------        --------------   

                                                                                                        
John J. Mazur, Jr.               75,000        $  750,000              0.160%                  0.136%                 0.119%
John N. Hopkins                  50,000           500,000              0.107%                  0.091%                 0.079%
Theodore J. Aanensen             32,500           325,000              0.070%                  0.059%                 0.051%
Matthew T. McClane               20,000           200,000              0.043%                  0.036%                 0.032%
John F. McGovern                 50,000           500,000              0.107%                  0.091%                 0.079%
Joseph P. Mazza                  50,000           500,000              0.107%                  0.091%                 0.079%
Leopold Montanaro                75,000           750,000              0.160%                  0.136%                 0.119%
Henry S. Parow                   75,000           750,000              0.160%                  0.136%                 0.119%
John F. Regan                    55,000           550,000              0.118%                  0.100%                 0.087%
Edward T. Rushforth               5,000            50,000              0.011%                  0.009%                 0.008%
Albert E. Gossweiler             42,500           425,000              0.091%                  0.077%                 0.067%
William C. Ledgerwood            20,000           200,000              0.043%                  0.036%                 0.032%
Sharon Jones                     10,000           100,000              0.021%                  0.018%                 0.016%
Patrick M. Joyce                  4,000            40,000              0.009%                  0.007%                 0.006%
Allan Beardslee                   4,000            40,000              0.009%                  0.007%                 0.006%
Erika Sacher                      5,000            50,000              0.011%                  0.009%                 0.008%
                                -------        ----------              -----                   -----                  -----
         Total                  573,000        $5,730,000              1.226%                  1.042%                 0.906%
                                =======        ==========              =====                   =====                  ===== 
                                                          
                                                             
-----------------
(1)  Assumes the issuance of 46,750,000 shares in the offering, including shares
     to be issued to Kearny MHC.
(2)  Assumes the issuance of 55,000,000 shares in the offering, including shares
     to be issued to Kearny MHC.
(3)  Assumes the issuance of 63,250,000 shares in the offering, including shares
     to be issued to Kearny MHC.

                                       116



         If the stockholders of Kearny Financial Corp. approve the stock benefit
plans as discussed in this  prospectus  (including  1.96% of the total number of
shares of common stock issued in the offering to public  stockholders and Kearny
MHC for the  restricted  stock  plan and 4.9% of the  total  number of shares of
common stock issued in the  offering to public  stockholders  and Kearny MHC for
the stock option plan), and assuming that the plans are funded with newly issued
shares  instead of shares  acquired  in open  market  purchases,  the  aggregate
ownership of directors and executive  officers would increase.  See Management -
Potential Stock Benefit Plans on page 113.

         Purchases of common stock in the  offering by directors  and  executive
officers will be counted toward the minimum of 14,025,000  shares required to be
sold to public stockholders to complete the offering. Management may, but is not
required  to,  purchase  additional  shares  in  the  offering  to  satisfy  the
14,025,000  share minimum,  subject to the limitation on the individual  maximum
share  purchase  limitations  and  the  requirement  that  directors,  executive
officers and their associates may not purchase, in the aggregate,  more than 25%
of the shares sold in the offering.

         Shares of common stock  purchased by directors and  executive  officers
cannot  be sold for a period  of one year  following  the  offering,  and  stock
certificates  issued to  directors  and  executive  officers  will bear a legend
restricting their sale. See The Stock Offering - Restrictions on Transferability
by Directors and Executive Officers on page 135.

Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management

         Currently,  all of the  outstanding  common  stock of Kearny  Financial
Corp. is held by Kearny MHC, the federal mutual holding company parent of Kearny
Financial  Corp.  After  the  stock  offering,  Kearny  MHC will hold 70% of the
outstanding  common stock of Kearny  Financial Corp.  Information  regarding the
planned  purchases  of  common  stock in the stock  offering  by  directors  and
executive  officers  of  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  (including  in each  case all
"associates"  of the directors and executive  officers) is set forth above under
Proposed Stock Purchases by Management.

         The  following  table sets forth  information  regarding  Kearny  MHC's
ownership of Kearny Financial Corp. common stock.



                                         Number of Shares
Name and Address                         of Common Stock        Percent of Shares of
of Beneficial Owner                     Beneficially Owned    Common Stock Outstanding
-------------------                     ------------------    ------------------------
                                                               
Kearny MHC
614 Kearny Avenue, Kearny, NJ 07032           10,000                  100%


                                       117



                               THE STOCK OFFERING

         The Board of Directors  adopted the plan authorizing the stock offering
on June 7, 2004, subject to the approval of the Office of Thrift Supervision. We
received  authorization  from the Office of Thrift  Supervision  to conduct  the
stock offering on December 28, 2004. Office of Thrift Supervision  authorization
does not  constitute a  recommendation  or  endorsement  of an investment in our
stock by the Office of Thrift Supervision.

General

         On June 7,  2004,  the  Board of  Directors  adopted  the plan of stock
issuance, pursuant to which Kearny Financial Corp. will sell its common stock to
eligible  depositors of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank in a subscription  offering
and,  if shares are  available,  to the general  public in a community  offering
and/or a  syndicated  community  offering.  The Board of  Directors  unanimously
adopted the plan after  consideration of the advantages and the disadvantages of
the stock  offering.  The stock offering will be accomplished in accordance with
the procedures set forth in the plan, the  requirements  of applicable  laws and
regulations, and the policies of the Office of Thrift Supervision.

         We are offering for sale between a minimum of 14,025,000  shares and an
anticipated  maximum  of  18,975,000  shares  of  common  stock in the  offering
(subject to adjustment to up to 21,821,250  shares).  The minimum purchase is 25
shares of common stock (minimum  investment of $250).  Our common stock is being
offered at a fixed price of $10.00 per share in the  offering.  Interest will be
paid on  subscription  funds  from the date the  payment is  received  until the
offering is either completed or terminated.

         We may cancel the offering at any time prior to  completion.  If we do,
orders for common stock  already  submitted  will be canceled  and  subscribers'
funds will be returned with interest.

         In accordance with Rule 15c2-4 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
pending  completion or termination of the offering,  subscription funds received
by us will be invested only in investments permissible under Rule 15c2-4.

Purposes of the Stock Offering

         Kearny  Financial Corp. has grown  significantly  in recent years.  The
proceeds from the sale of common stock of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  will provide
Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank  with new  equity  capital,  which  will  support
additional future deposit growth and expanded  operations.  While Kearny Federal
Savings  Bank  currently  exceeds  all  regulatory  capital  requirements  to be
considered well capitalized, the sale of stock, coupled with the accumulation of
earnings,  less  dividends or other  reductions  in capital,  from year to year,
provides a means for the orderly  preservation  and expansion of Kearny  Federal
Savings Bank's capital base. If we expand our business as we currently  plan, we
will need the additional  capital to remain well  capitalized  under  regulatory
capital requirements.

         The offering  will afford our  directors,  officers and  employees  the
opportunity  to  become  stockholders,  which  we  believe  to be  an  effective
performance  incentive  and an  effective  means  of  attracting  and  retaining
qualified  personnel.  The offering  also will provide our  customers  and local
community members with an opportunity to acquire our stock.

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Conduct of the Offering

         Subject to the limitations of the plan of stock issuance adopted by our
Board of Directors, shares of common stock are being offered in descending order
of priority in the subscription offering to:

o    Eligible Account Holders  (depositors at the close of business on March 31,
     2003 with deposits of at least $50.00);

o    the tax qualified  employee stock benefit plans of Kearny  Federal  Savings
     Bank;

o    Supplemental  Eligible Account Holders (depositors at the close of business
     on September 30, 2004 with deposits of at least $50.00);

o    Other Members (depositors at the close of business on November 30, 2004 who
     are not Eligible Account Holders or Supplemental Eligible Account Holders).

         Former  depositors  of West Essex  Bank,  which was  acquired by Kearny
Federal Savings Bank in July 2003,  will be treated as Eligible  Account Holders
if they had deposits  with West Essex at the close of business on March 31, 2003
of at least $50.00.

         To the extent that shares  remain  available  and  depending  on market
conditions  at or near  the  completion  of the  subscription  offering,  we may
conduct a community offering and possibly a syndicated  community offering.  The
community offering, if any, may commence at any time during or subsequent to the
completion of the subscription  offering. A syndicated community offering, if we
conduct one, would commence just prior to, or as soon as practicable  after, the
termination  of  the  subscription   offering.  In  any  community  offering  or
syndicated  community  offering,  we will fill orders for our common stock in an
equitable  manner as  determined by the Board of Directors in order to achieve a
wide distribution of the stock.

         Any shares sold above the maximum of the offering  range may be sold to
the employee stock ownership plan before satisfying remaining unfilled orders of
Eligible  Account  Holders  to fill  the  plan's  subscription,  or the plan may
purchase  some  or all of the  shares  covered  by its  subscription  after  the
offering in the open market, subject to any required regulatory approval.

Subscription Offering

         Subscription Rights.  Non-transferable subscription rights to subscribe
for the  purchase  of common  stock  have been  granted  under the plan of stock
issuance to the following persons in the following order of priority:

         Priority 1: Eligible  Account  Holders.  Each Eligible  Account  Holder
shall be given the opportunity to purchase,  subject to the overall  limitations
described  under The Stock  Offering - Limitations on Purchases of Common Stock,
up to the  greater  of (i) the  maximum  purchase  limitation  in the  community
offering  (i.e.,  50,000  shares),  (ii)  one-tenth of 1% of the total shares of
common stock offered in the  subscription and community  offering,  and (iii) 15
times  the  product  (rounded  down  to  the  next  whole  number)  obtained  by
multiplying  the  total  number  of  shares  of  common  stock  offered  in  the
subscription and community offering by a fraction, of which the numerator is the
total amount of the qualifying  deposits of the Eligible  Account Holder and the
denominator  is the total  amount of all  qualifying  deposits  of all  Eligible
Account  Holders.  If there are  insufficient  shares  available  to satisfy all
subscriptions of Eligible

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Account  Holders,  shares will be allocated to Eligible Account Holders so as to
permit each  subscribing  Eligible Account Holder to purchase a number of shares
sufficient to make his total allocation equal to the lesser of 100 shares or the
number of shares ordered.  Thereafter,  unallocated  shares will be allocated to
remaining  subscribing  Eligible  Account  Holders  whose  subscriptions  remain
unfilled in the same proportion that each subscriber's  qualifying deposit bears
to the total amount of qualifying  deposits of all subscribing  Eligible Account
Holders, in each case measured as of March 31, 2003, whose subscriptions  remain
unfilled.  Subscription  rights  received by officers  and  directors  of Kearny
Financial  Corp. or Kearny Federal  Savings Bank, and such persons'  associates,
based on their increased deposits in Kearny Federal Savings Bank in the one year
preceding March 31, 2003 will be subordinated to the subscription  rights of all
other  Eligible  Account  Holders.  To ensure proper  allocation of stock,  each
Eligible Account Holder must list on his order form all accounts in which he had
an ownership  interest as of the  Eligibility  Record  Date.  Failure to list an
account, or providing incorrect information,  could result in the loss of all or
a part of the subscriber's  allocation.  The total amount of qualifying deposits
of all Eligible Account Holders as of March 31, 2003 was $1,593.3 million.

         Priority  2:  The  Employee  Plans.  If  there  are  sufficient  shares
remaining after  satisfaction of subscriptions by Eligible Account Holders,  the
tax  qualified  employee  stock benefit  plans may be given the  opportunity  to
purchase in the  aggregate  up to but less than 5% of the total number of shares
of common stock issued in the offering to public stockholders and to Kearny MHC.
It is expected that Kearny Federal  Savings Bank's employee stock ownership plan
will  purchase up to 8% of the shares  issued in the  offering to persons  other
than  Kearny  MHC.  To the extent the  employee  stock  ownership  plan does not
purchase  shares in the offering,  the employee stock  ownership plan intends to
purchase  shares in the open market  purchases  subsequent to the closing of the
offering, subject to any required regulatory approval.

         Priority  3:  Supplemental  Eligible  Account  Holders.  If  there  are
sufficient  shares  remaining after  satisfaction of  subscriptions  by Eligible
Account  Holders  and the tax  qualified  employee  stock  benefit  plans,  each
Supplemental Eligible Account Holder shall be given the opportunity to purchase,
subject  to the  overall  limitations  described  under  The  Stock  Offering  -
Limitations  on Purchases of Common Stock,  up to the greater of (i) the maximum
purchase  limitation in the  community  offering  (i.e.,  50,000  shares),  (ii)
one-tenth of 1% of the total shares of common stock offered in the  subscription
and community offering, and (iii) 15 times the product (rounded down to the next
whole number) obtained by multiplying the total number of shares of common stock
offered in the subscription and community  offering by a fraction,  of which the
numerator is the amount of the qualifying deposits of the Supplemental  Eligible
Account  Holder  and the  denominator  is the  total  amount  of all  qualifying
deposits of all Supplemental  Eligible Account Holders. If Supplemental Eligible
Account Holders subscribe for a number of shares which, when added to the shares
subscribed for by Eligible Account Holders and the employee stock ownership plan
and other  tax-qualified  employee stock benefit plans,  if any, is in excess of
the total number of shares  offered in the offering,  the shares of common stock
will be allocated among subscribing  Supplemental Eligible Account Holders first
so as to  permit  each  subscribing  Supplemental  Eligible  Account  Holder  to
purchase a number of shares sufficient to make his total allocation equal to the
lesser of 100 shares or the number of shares  ordered.  Thereafter,  unallocated
shares will be  allocated  to each  subscribing  Supplemental  Eligible  Account
Holder whose  subscription  remains  unfilled in the same  proportion  that each
subscriber's  qualifying deposit bear to the total amount of qualifying deposits
of all subscribing  Supplemental Eligible Account Holders, in each case measured
as of September 30, 2004, whose subscriptions remain unfilled.  To ensure proper
allocation of stock, each Supplemental  Eligible Account Holder must list on his
order  form  all  accounts  in  which  he had an  ownership  interest  as of the
Supplemental  Eligibility Record Date. Failure to list an account,  or providing
incorrect information, could

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result in the loss of all or a part of the  subscriber's  allocation.  The total
amount of qualifying deposits of all Supplemental Eligible Account Holders as of
September 30, 2004 was $1,511.1 million.

         Priority 4: Other  Members.  If there are sufficient  shares  remaining
after  satisfaction of all  subscriptions by the Eligible  Account Holders,  the
tax-qualified employee stock benefit plans and the Supplemental Eligible Account
Holders,  each Other Member  (depositors  as of November 30, 2004) who is not an
Eligible Account Holder or a Supplemental Eligible Account Holder shall have the
opportunity  to purchase up to the greater of 50,000  shares of common  stock or
one-tenth of 1% of the total  offering of shares of common stock  offered in the
subscription  offering,  subject to the overall purchase  limitations  described
under The Stock  Offering - Limitations  on Purchases of Common Stock.  If Other
Members  subscribe  for a number  of  shares  which,  when  added to the  shares
subscribed for by Eligible Account  Holders,  the  tax-qualified  employee stock
benefit plans and Supplemental  Eligible  Account  Holders,  is in excess of the
total  number of shares  offered in the  offering,  the  subscriptions  of Other
Members  will be  allocated  among  subscribing  Other  Members  to permit  each
subscribing  Other Member to purchase a number of shares  sufficient to make his
total allocation of common stock equal to the lesser of 100 shares or the number
of  shares  subscribed  for by  Other  Members.  Any  shares  remaining  will be
allocated  among  the  subscribing  Other  Members  whose  subscriptions  remain
unsatisfied  on a 100 shares (or whatever  lesser amount is available) per order
basis  until all  orders  have been  filled or the  remaining  shares  have been
allocated.

         Restrictions on Transfer of Subscription Rights and Shares.  Applicable
regulations   and  the  plan  of  stock  issuance   prohibits  any  person  with
subscription rights,  including Eligible Account Holders,  Supplemental Eligible
Account  Holders and Other  Members,  from  transferring  or  entering  into any
agreement or understanding to transfer the legal or beneficial  ownership of the
subscription rights or the shares of common stock to be issued when subscription
rights are exercised. Subscription rights may be exercised only by the person to
whom they are granted and only for his account.  With the exception of IRA stock
purchases,   the  subscription  rights  of  a  qualifying  account  may  not  be
transferred  to an account that is in a different  form of ownership.  Adding or
deleting a name or  otherwise  altering  the form of  beneficial  ownership of a
qualifying  account will result in the loss of your  subscription  rights.  Each
person  subscribing  for shares will be required to certify  that such person is
purchasing  shares  solely for his own account and that he has no  agreement  or
understanding regarding the sale or transfer of the shares. The regulations also
prohibit  any person  from  offering  or making an  announcement  of an offer or
intent  to make an offer to  purchase  subscription  rights  or shares of common
stock before the completion of the offering.

         We will pursue any and all legal and equitable remedies in the event we
become  aware of the transfer of  subscription  rights and will not honor orders
which we determine involve the transfer of subscription rights.

Deadlines for Purchasing Stock

         The subscription  offering will terminate at 12:00 noon,  Eastern time,
on January 28, 2005. We may extend this  expiration  date without  notice to you
for up to 45  days,  until  March  14,  2005.  Once  submitted,  your  order  is
irrevocable  unless the  offering  is extended  beyond  March 14,  2005.  We may
request  permission from the Office of Thrift Supervision to extend the offering
beyond March 14,  2005,  and the Office of Thrift  Supervision  may grant one or
more extensions of the offering of up to 90 days per extension,  but in no event
may the  offering be extended  beyond June 7, 2006.  If the offering is extended
beyond March 14, 2005, we will notify each subscriber and subscribers  will have
the right to confirm,  modify or rescind their subscriptions.  If an affirmative
response is not received prior to the expiration of

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the  resolicitation  period,  a subscriber's  subscription  will be canceled and
funds will be returned with interest.

         A community  offering  and a  syndicated  community  offering,  if such
offerings are  conducted,  may terminate at any time without notice but no later
than March 14, 2005.

Community Offering

         If less  than  the  total  number  of  shares  of  common  stock  to be
subscribed  for in the  offering  are sold in the  subscription  offering  then,
depending on market  conditions at or near the  completion  of the  subscription
offering,  shares  remaining  unsubscribed may be made available for purchase in
the community  offering to certain  members of the general  public.  The maximum
amount of common stock that any person may purchase in the community offering is
50,000 shares, or $500,000.  In the community  offering,  if any, shares will be
available  for purchase by the general  public,  and  preference  shall be given
first to natural persons residing in Bergen, Hudson, Passaic,  Morris, Monmouth,
Middlesex,  Essex,  Union and Ocean  Counties,  New  Jersey  and second to other
natural  persons  residing  in New  Jersey.  We intend to issue the  shares in a
manner that would promote a wide distribution of common stock.

         We will consider persons  residing in one of the specified  counties if
they occupy a dwelling in the county and establish an ongoing physical  presence
in the county that is not merely  transitory in nature. We may utilize depositor
or loan records or other evidence  provided to us to make a determination  as to
whether a person is a resident in one of the specified  counties.  In all cases,
the determination of residence status will be made by us in our sole discretion.

         If purchasers in the community  offering,  whose orders would otherwise
be accepted,  subscribe for more shares than are  available  for  purchase,  the
shares  available to them will be allocated among persons  submitting  orders in
the community offering in an equitable manner we determine.

         As stated above,  preference  in the community  shall be given first to
natural  persons  residing  in  Bergen,  Hudson,  Passaic,   Morris,   Monmouth,
Middlesex,  Essex,  Union and Ocean  Counties,  New  Jersey  and second to other
natural  persons  residing  in New  Jersey.  If shares are  available  for these
"preferred  purchasers"  in the  community  offering but there are  insufficient
shares to satisfy all orders,  the available  shares will be allocated  first to
each preferred purchasers whose order we accept in an amount equal to the lesser
of 100  shares or the  number  of shares  ordered  by each such  subscriber,  if
possible.  After that,  unallocated shares will be allocated among the remaining
preferred purchasers whose orders remain unsatisfied in the same proportion that
the unfilled order of each such subscriber bears to the total unfilled orders of
all such  subscribers.  If,  after  filling  the  orders of the  first  group of
preferred  purchasers  (natural  persons  residing in Bergen,  Hudson,  Passaic,
Morris,  Monmouth,  Middlesex,  Essex, Union and Ocean Counties, New Jersey) and
then the orders of the second group of  preferred  purchasers  (natural  persons
residing in New  Jersey),  shares are  available  for other  subscribers  in the
community  offering  but there are  insufficient  shares to satisfy  all orders,
shares will be allocated in the same manner as for preferred purchasers.

         The  community  offering,  if any,  may  commence at any time during or
subsequent  to  the  completion  of the  subscription  offering.  The  community
offering,  if any, must be completed  within 45 days after the completion of the
subscription  offering  unless  otherwise  extended  by  the  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision.

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         If we receive  regulatory  approval for an extension,  all  subscribers
will be notified of the extension and of the duration of any extension  that has
been granted, and will have the right to confirm, increase,  decrease or rescind
their orders. If we do not receive an affirmative  response from a subscriber to
any  resolicitation,  the  subscriber's  order will be  rescinded  and all funds
received will be promptly returned with interest.

         The  opportunity  to  subscribe  for  shares  of  common  stock  in the
community  offering is subject to our right to reject orders,  in whole or part,
either at the time of  receipt of an order or as soon as  practicable  following
the expiration date of the offering. If your order is rejected in part, you will
not have the right to cancel the remainder of your order.

Syndicated Community Offering

         The plan of stock issuance  provides that, if necessary,  all shares of
common stock not purchased in the subscription  offering and community  offering
may be offered for sale to the general public in a syndicated community offering
to be managed by Sandler O'Neill, acting as our agent. In such capacity, Sandler
O'Neill may form a syndicate of other broker-dealers. Alternatively, we may sell
any remaining shares in an underwritten public offering. Neither Sandler O'Neill
nor any  registered  broker-dealer  will have any obligation to take or purchase
any shares of the common stock in the syndicated  community  offering;  however,
Sandler  O'Neill has agreed to use its best efforts in the sale of shares in any
syndicated community offering. The syndicated community offering would terminate
no later than 45 days after the expiration of the subscription offering,  unless
extended  by us,  with  approval  of the  Office  of Thrift  Supervision.  See -
Community  Offering above for a discussion of rights of subscribers in the event
an extension is granted.

         The  opportunity  to  subscribe  for  shares  of  common  stock  in the
syndicated community offering is subject to our right to reject orders, in whole
or part,  either at the time of  receipt  of an order or as soon as  practicable
following  the  expiration  date of the  offering.  If your order is rejected in
part, you will not have the right to cancel the remainder of your order.

         Purchasers  in  the  syndicated  community  offering  are  eligible  to
purchase up to $500,000 of common stock (which  equals  50,000  shares).  We may
begin the syndicated  community offering or underwritten  public offering at any
time following the commencement of the subscription offering.

         If we are unable to find  purchasers  from the  general  public for all
unsubscribed  shares,  we will make other  purchase  arrangements,  if feasible.
Other purchase arrangements must be approved by the Office of Thrift Supervision
and may provide for purchases by directors, officers, their associates and other
persons in excess of the limitations  provided in the plan of stock issuance and
in excess of the proposed  director  purchases  discussed  earlier,  although no
purchases are currently intended. If other purchase arrangements cannot be made,
we may do any of the following: terminate the stock offering and promptly return
all funds;  set a new offering  range,  notify all subscribers and give them the
opportunity  to  confirm,  cancel or change  their  orders;  or take such  other
actions as may be permitted by the Office of Thrift Supervision.

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Limitations on Purchases of Common Stock

         The following additional  limitations have been imposed on purchases of
shares of common stock:

          1.   The  maximum  number of  shares  which  may be  purchased  in the
               offering  by any  individual  (or  individuals  through  a single
               account) shall not exceed 50,000 shares, or $500,000.  This limit
               applies  to  stock  purchases  in  total  in  the   subscription,
               community and syndicated community offerings.

          2.   The  maximum  number  of  shares  that  may be  purchased  by any
               individual together with any associate or group of persons acting
               in concert is 75,000 shares, or $750,000. Any persons or entities
               having the same  address  on an  account or stock  order form are
               considered  to be acting in concert.  This limit applies to stock
               purchases in total in the subscription,  community and syndicated
               community   offerings.   This   limit   does  not  apply  to  our
               tax-qualified   employee  stock  benefit  plans,   which  in  the
               aggregate  may  subscribe for up to but less than 5% of the total
               number of shares of common stock issued in the offering to public
               stockholders and to Kearny MHC.

          3.   The  maximum  number of  shares  which  may be  purchased  in all
               categories  in the  offering by our officers  and  directors  and
               their  associates  in the  aggregate  shall not exceed 25% of the
               total number of shares sold in the offering.

          4.   The minimum order is 25 shares, or $250.

          5.   If the number of shares otherwise allocable to any person or that
               person's  associates  would be in excess of the maximum number of
               shares  permitted  as set  forth  above,  the  number  of  shares
               allocated   to  that  person  shall  be  reduced  to  the  lowest
               limitation  applicable  to that  person,  and then the  number of
               shares  allocated to each group  consisting  of a person and that
               person's  associates  shall  be  reduced  so that  the  aggregate
               allocation  to that person and his  associates  complies with the
               above  maximums,  and the  maximum  number  of  shares  shall  be
               reallocated among that person and his associates in proportion to
               the shares  subscribed by each (after first applying the maximums
               applicable to each person, separately).

          6.   Depending on market or financial  conditions,  we may decrease or
               increase  the  purchase  limitations,  provided  that the maximum
               purchase  limitations  may not be increased  to a  percentage  in
               excess of 5% of the offering. If we increase the maximum purchase
               limitations,  we are  only  required  to  resolicit  persons  who
               subscribed for the maximum  purchase  amount and may, in our sole
               discretion, resolicit certain other large subscribers.

          7.   If the total number of shares  offered  increases in the offering
               due to an  increase  in the  maximum of the  estimated  valuation
               range of up to 15% (the adjusted  maximum) the additional  shares
               will generally be issued in the following order of priority:  (a)
               to fill the employee stock ownership plan's subscription;  (b) if
               there  is an  oversubscription  at the  Eligible  Account  Holder
               level,  to  fill  unfilled   subscriptions  of  Eligible  Account
               Holders;  (c) if there is an oversubscription at the Supplemental
               Eligible Account Holder level, to fill unfilled  subscriptions of
               Supplemental  Eligible  Account  Holders;  (d)  if  there  is  an
               oversubscription  at the Other  Member  level,  to fill  unfilled
               subscriptions of Other Members;  (e) to fill orders received in a
               community offering; with preference given to

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               persons who live in the local  community;  and (f) to fill orders
               received in the syndicated community offering. The employee stock
               ownership  plan  may,  however,  elect to fill part or all of its
               stock order in the open  market,  after  completion  of the stock
               offering.

          8.   No person will be allowed to purchase any stock if that  purchase
               would be illegal  under any federal or state law or regulation or
               would violate regulations or policies of the National Association
               of Securities  Dealers. We and/or our representatives may ask for
               an  acceptable  legal  opinion from any  purchaser  regarding the
               legality  of the  purchase  and may refuse to honor any  purchase
               order if that opinion is not timely furnished.

          9.   We have the right to reject any order submitted by a person whose
               representations  we  believe  are  untrue  or who we  believe  is
               violating,   circumventing  or  intends  to  violate,   evade  or
               circumvent  the  terms  and  conditions  of  the  plan  of  stock
               issuance, either alone or acting in concert with others.

          10.  The above  restrictions also apply to purchases by persons acting
               in concert under  applicable  regulations of the Office of Thrift
               Supervision.   Under   regulations   of  the   Office  of  Thrift
               Supervision, our directors are not considered to be affiliates or
               a group acting in concert with other directors solely as a result
               of membership on our Board of Directors.

          11.  In addition,  in any community  offering or syndicated  community
               offering,  we must first fill orders for our common stock up to a
               maximum of 2% of the total  shares  issued in the  offering  in a
               manner that will achieve a wide  distribution  of the stock,  and
               thereafter  any  remaining  shares will be  allocated on an equal
               number of shares  per order  basis,  until all  orders  have been
               filled or the shares have been exhausted.

         The  term  "associate"  of a  person  is  defined  in the plan of stock
issuance to mean:

          (1)  any  corporation  or  organization  of which a person is a senior
               officer or partner or is, directly or indirectly,  the beneficial
               owner of 10% or more of any class of equity securities;

          (2)  any  trust or other  estate in which a person  has a  substantial
               beneficial  interest or as to which a person serves as trustee or
               in a similar fiduciary capacity; or

          (3)  any  relative or spouse of a person or any  relative of a spouse,
               who has the same home as that person.

         For  example,  a  corporation  for which a person  serves as an officer
would  be an  associate  of  that  person  and  all  shares  purchased  by  that
corporation  would be  included  with the  number of shares  which  that  person
individually could purchase under the above limitations.

         The term "acting in concert" means:

          (1)  knowing  participation  in a  joint  activity  or  interdependent
               conscious  parallel  action  towards a common goal whether or not
               pursuant to an express agreement; or

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          (2)  a  combination  or  pooling of voting or other  interests  in the
               securities  of an issuer  for a common  purpose  pursuant  to any
               contract,   understanding,   relationship,   agreement  or  other
               arrangement, whether written or otherwise.

         A person or  company  which  acts in  concert  with  another  person or
company  ("other  party")  shall also be deemed to be acting in concert with any
person or company who is also acting in concert  with that other  party,  except
that any  tax-qualified  employee  stock  benefit  plan will not be deemed to be
acting in concert with its trustee or a person who serves in a similar  capacity
solely for the  purpose of  determining  whether  stock held by the  trustee and
stock held by the plan will be aggregated.  We will presume that certain persons
are acting in concert based upon various facts,  including the fact that persons
have joint account  relationships or the fact that such persons have filed joint
Schedules 13D with the Securities and Exchange  Commission with respect to other
companies.  We reserve  the right to make an  independent  investigation  of any
facts or  circumstances  brought to our attention that indicate that one or more
persons acting  independently  or as a group acting in concert may be attempting
to violate or circumvent the regulatory  prohibition on the  transferability  of
subscription rights.

         We have  the  right,  in our  sole  discretion,  to  determine  whether
prospective   purchasers  are   "associates"   or  "acting  in  concert."  These
determinations  are in our sole discretion and may be based on whatever evidence
we believe to be  relevant,  including  joint  account  relationships  or shared
addresses on the records of Kearny Federal Savings Bank.

         Each person  purchasing shares of the common stock in the offering will
be  considered  to have  confirmed  that his purchase does not conflict with the
maximum  purchase  limitation.  If the  purchase  limitation  is violated by any
person or any associate or group of persons  affiliated  or otherwise  acting in
concert with that person, we will have the right to purchase from that person at
the $10.00 purchase price per share all shares acquired by that person in excess
of that  purchase  limitation  or, if the excess  shares  have been sold by that
person, to receive the difference  between the purchase price per share paid for
the excess  shares and the price at which the  excess  shares  were sold by that
person. Our right to purchase the excess shares will be assignable.

         Common  stock  purchased  pursuant  to  the  offering  will  be  freely
transferable,  except  for  shares  purchased  by our  directors  and  executive
officers.  For  certain  restrictions  on  the  common  stock  purchased  by our
directors and  executive  officers,  see The Stock  Offering -  Restrictions  on
Transferability  by Directors and  Executive  Officers on page 135. In addition,
under guidelines of the National  Association of Securities Dealers,  members of
the National  Association of Securities Dealers and their associates are subject
to certain  restrictions  on the transfer of securities  purchased in accordance
with  subscription  rights  and to  certain  reporting  requirements  after  the
purchase.

Ordering and Receiving Common Stock

         Use of Order  Forms.  Rights  to  subscribe  may only be  exercised  by
completion of an order form.  Any person  receiving an order form who desires to
subscribe  for  shares  of  common  stock  must do so  prior  to the  applicable
expiration  date by  delivering  by mail or in person a  properly  executed  and
completed  order form,  together with full payment of the purchase price for all
shares for which  subscription is made or include  appropriate  authorization in
the space  provided  on the order form for  withdrawal  of full  payment  from a
deposit account at Kearny Federal Savings Bank; provided,  however,  that if the
employee  plans  subscribe  for shares  during the  subscription  offering,  the
employee  plans  will not be  required  to pay for the  shares  at the time they
subscribe but rather may pay for the shares upon completion of the offering. All
subscription  rights will expire on the expiration date,  whether or not we have
been able to locate each

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person  entitled  to  subscription  rights.  To place an order in the  community
offering,  an  investor  must  complete an order form and return it prior to the
applicable  expiration  date.  Once  submitted,  subscription  orders  cannot be
revoked without our consent.

         We may,  in our sole  discretion,  permit  institutional  investors  to
submit  irrevocable  orders  together with the legally  binding  commitment  for
payment and to  thereafter  pay for such  shares of common  stock for which they
subscribe in the community offering at any time before the 48 hours prior to the
completion  of the  offering.  This  payment may be made by wire  transfer.  Our
interpretation  of the terms and conditions of the plan of stock issuance and of
the acceptability of the order forms will be final.

         To  ensure  that your  stock  purchase  eligibility  and  priority  are
properly  identified,  you must list all accounts on the order form,  giving all
names in each account, the account number and the approximate account balance as
of the appropriate  eligibility  date. We will strive to identify your ownership
in all accounts, but cannot guarantee we will identify all accounts in which you
have an ownership interest.

         If a stock order form:

o    is not delivered to a subscriber and is returned to us by the United States
     Postal Service or we are unable to locate the addressee;

o    is not received by us or is received after the applicable expiration date;

o    is not completed correctly or executed; or

o    is not accompanied by the full required  payment for the shares  subscribed
     for,  including  instances where a savings  account or certificate  balance
     from  which  withdrawal  is  authorized  is  unavailable,   uncollected  or
     insufficient to fund the required payment,  but excluding  subscriptions by
     the employee plans;

         then the subscription  rights for that person will lapse as though that
person  failed to  return  the  completed  order  form  within  the time  period
specified.

         However, we may, but will not be required to, waive any irregularity on
any order  form or  require  the  submission  of  corrected  order  forms or the
remittance of full payment for subscribed  shares by a date that we may specify.
The waiver of an  irregularity  on an order form in no way obligates us to waive
any other  irregularity on any other order form. Waivers will be considered on a
case by case  basis.  We will not  accept  orders  received  on  photocopies  or
facsimile  order forms,  or for which  payment is to be made by wire transfer or
payment  from  private  third  parties.  Our  interpretation  of the  terms  and
conditions of the plan of stock issuance and of the  acceptability  of the order
forms  will  be  final,  subject  to the  authority  of  the  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision.

         The  reverse  side of the order  form  contains  a  certification  form
mandated by regulation.  We will not accept order forms where the  certification
form is not executed.  By executing and returning the  certification  form,  you
will be certifying that you received this prospectus and acknowledging  that the
common stock is not a deposit  account and is not insured or  guaranteed  by the
federal government.  You also will be acknowledging that you received disclosure
concerning the risks involved in this offering.  The certification form could be
used as support to show that you understand the nature of this investment.

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         To ensure that each  purchaser  receives a prospectus at least 48 hours
before the  applicable  expiration  date, in accordance  with Rule 15c2-8 of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  no  prospectus  will be mailed any later than
five days prior to the expiration date or hand delivered any later than two days
prior to the expiration  date.  Execution of the order form will confirm receipt
or delivery in accordance with Rule 15c2-8. Order forms will only be distributed
with a prospectus.

         Payment  for Shares.  For  subscriptions  to be valid,  payment for all
subscribed  shares will be required to accompany  all properly  completed  order
forms,  on or prior to the expiration date specified on the order form unless we
extend the date.  Employee plans  subscribing for shares during the subscription
offering may pay for those shares upon  completion of the offering.  Payment for
shares of common stock may be made:

o    in cash, if delivered in person;

o    by check or money order made payable to Kearny Financial Corp.; or

o    for shares subscribed for in the subscription offering, by authorization of
     withdrawal  from deposit  accounts  maintained  with Kearny Federal Savings
     Bank.

         In accordance with Rule 15c2-4 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
subscribers'  checks must be made payable to Kearny  Financial Corp., and checks
received  by the stock  information  center will be  transmitted  by noon of the
following  business day  directly to the  segregated  deposit  account at Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank  established to hold funds received as payment for shares.
We may, at our  discretion,  determine  during the offering period that it is in
the best interest of Kearny Federal Savings Bank to hold  subscription  funds in
an escrow account at another insured financial  institution instead of at Kearny
Federal Savings Bank.

         The employee  stock  ownership plan will not be required to pay for the
shares  subscribed for at the time it subscribes,  but rather may pay for shares
of common stock  subscribed  for upon the  completion of the offering;  provided
that there is in force from the time of its subscription until the completion of
the offering a loan commitment from an unrelated  financial  institution or from
us to lend to the employee  stock  ownership  plan, at that time,  the aggregate
purchase price of the shares for which it subscribed.

         Appropriate  means by which account  withdrawals  may be authorized are
provided on the order form. If a subscriber authorizes us to withdraw the amount
of the purchase price from his or her deposit  account,  we will do so as of the
completion  of the  offering,  though the account  must  contain the full amount
necessary  for  payment  at  the  time  the  subscription  is  received.  Once a
withdrawal has been authorized,  none of the designated withdrawal amount may be
used by a subscriber for any purpose other than to purchase the common stock for
which a  subscription  has been made until the  offering  has been  completed or
terminated.  In the case of payments  authorized  to be made through  withdrawal
from savings accounts,  all sums authorized for withdrawal will continue to earn
interest  at the  contract  rate  until  the  offering  has  been  completed  or
terminated.  Interest  penalties for early withdrawal  applicable to certificate
accounts will not apply to  withdrawals  authorized  for the purchase of shares.
However, if a partial withdrawal results in a certificate account with a balance
less than the applicable minimum balance  requirement,  the certificate shall be
canceled at the time of withdrawal,  without penalty,  and the remaining balance
will be converted  into a savings  account and will earn interest at the regular
passbook savings rate subsequent to the withdrawal. In the case of payments made
in cash or by check or money order, funds will be placed in a segregated account
and interest will be paid by Kearny Federal Savings Bank at the regular passbook
savings rate from the date  payment is received  until the offering is completed
or

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terminated.  An executed  order form,  once we receive it, may not be  modified,
amended, or rescinded without our consent,  unless the offering is not completed
within 45 days after the conclusion of the subscription offering, in which event
subscribers may be given the opportunity to increase, decrease, or rescind their
subscription  for a specified  period of time.  If the offering is not completed
for any reason,  all funds submitted  pursuant to the offerings will be promptly
refunded with interest as described above.

         Kearny Federal Savings Bank's individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and
Keogh  accounts  do not permit  investment  in our  common  stock.  A  depositor
interested in using his or her IRA or Keogh funds to purchase  common stock must
do so through a self-directed IRA or Keogh account.  Since we do not offer those
accounts, we will allow a depositor to make a trustee-to-trustee transfer of the
IRA or Keogh funds to a trustee  offering a  self-directed  IRA or Keogh program
with the  agreement  that the funds will be used to purchase our common stock in
the  offering.  There will be no early  withdrawal or Internal  Revenue  Service
interest penalties for transfers. The new trustee would hold the common stock in
a self-directed account in the same manner as we now hold the depositor's IRA of
Keogh  funds.  An annual  administrative  fee may be payable to the new trustee.
Depositors  interested  in using  funds in an IRA or Keogh  with us to  purchase
common stock should contact the stock information  center as soon as possible so
that the necessary  forms may be forwarded for execution and returned before the
subscription  offering ends. In addition,  federal laws and regulations  require
that officers, directors and 10% stockholders who use self-directed IRA or Keogh
funds to purchase  shares of common  stock in the  subscription  offering,  make
purchases for the exclusive benefit of IRA or Keogh accounts.

         Federal  regulations  prohibit Kearny Federal Savings Bank from lending
funds or  extending  credit to any person to  purchase  the common  stock in the
offering.

         Stock Information  Center.  Our stock information  center is located at
120 Passaic  Avenue,  Fairfield,  New Jersey  07004.  The phone  number is (866)
424-2161.  The stock information center's hours of operation are generally 10:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, Monday through Friday.

         Delivery of Stock Certificates.  Certificates representing common stock
issued  in the  offering  will be mailed by our  transfer  agent to the  persons
entitled  thereto at the address noted on the order form, as soon as practicable
following completion of the offering. Any certificates returned as undeliverable
will be held until  claimed by persons  legally  entitled  thereto or  otherwise
disposed of in accordance with applicable law. Until certificates for the common
stock are available and delivered to subscribers, subscribers may not be able to
sell the shares of stock for which they  subscribed,  even though trading of our
common stock may have commenced.

Restrictions on Repurchase of Shares

         Under  Office  of Thrift  Supervision  regulations,  we may not,  for a
period of one year from the date of the  completion of the offering,  repurchase
any of our  common  stock  from any  person,  except (1) in an offer made to all
stockholders to repurchase the common stock on a pro rata basis, approved by the
Office of Thrift  Supervision,  (2) the  repurchase  of  qualifying  shares of a
director,  or (3)  repurchases to fund restricted  stock plans or  tax-qualified
employee stock benefit  plans.  Where  extraordinary  circumstances  exist,  the
Office of Thrift  Supervision may approve the open market repurchase of up to 5%
of our common stock during the first year  following  the  offering.  To receive
such approval,  we must establish compelling and valid business purposes for the
repurchase to the satisfaction of the Office of Thrift Supervision. Furthermore,
repurchases  of any  common  stock are  prohibited  if they would  cause  Kearny
Federal  Savings  Bank's  regulatory  capital  to be  reduced  below the  amount
required under the regulatory

                                       129



capital  requirements  imposed by the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  If, in the
future,  the  rules  and  regulations  regarding  the  repurchase  of stock  are
liberalized, we may utilize the rules and regulations then in effect.

How We  Determined  the  $10.00  Per Share  Price and the Number of Shares to Be
Issued in the Stock Offering

         The plan of stock  issuance  requires  that the  purchase  price of the
common  stock must be based on the  appraised  pro forma  market value of Kearny
Financial  Corp. and Kearny Federal  Savings Bank, as determined on the basis of
an  independent  valuation.  RP  Financial,  LC, a financial  services  industry
consulting firm whose members  collectively have over 100 years of experience in
valuing financial  institutions for mutual holding company  reorganizations  and
stock  offerings,  has been retained to make this valuation.  Kearny selected RP
Financial based upon its experience and reputation in valuing stock offerings by
issuers such as Kearny Financial Corp. Kearny has no prior  relationship with RP
Financial.  For its services in making this appraisal,  RP Financial's  fees and
out-of-pocket  expenses  are  estimated  to be  $75,000.  Kearny  has  agreed to
indemnify RP  Financial  and any  employees  of RP  Financial  who act for or on
behalf of RP  Financial in  connection  with the  appraisal  against any and all
loss, cost, damage,  claim,  liability or expense of any kind,  including claims
under federal and state securities laws, arising out of any misstatement, untrue
statement  of a  material  fact or  omission  to  state a  material  fact in the
information  supplied  by  Kearny  to  RP  Financial,  unless  RP  Financial  is
determined to be negligent or otherwise at fault.

         RP  Financial  made its  appraisal  in  reliance  upon the  information
contained in this prospectus,  including the financial statements.  RP Financial
also considered the following factors, among others:

o    the present and  projected  operating  results and  financial  condition of
     Kearny Financial Corp. and Kearny Federal Savings Bank, which were prepared
     by Kearny Federal Savings Bank and then adjusted by RP Financial to reflect
     the  net  proceeds  of  this  offering  and the  economic  and  demographic
     conditions in Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank's  existing  marketing area as
     prepared by RP Financial;

o    certain  historical,  financial  and other  information  relating to Kearny
     Federal Savings Bank prepared by Kearny Federal Savings Bank; and

o    the  impact of the  stock  offering  on  Kearny's  net  worth and  earnings
     potential as calculated by RP Financial.

         The  appraisal  also  incorporated  an  analysis  of a  peer  group  of
publicly-traded  mutual  holding  companies  that RP Financial  considered to be
comparable to Kearny. The peer group analysis conducted by RP Financial included
a total of ten  publicly-traded  mutual  holding  companies with total assets of
more than $250 million and less than $10 billion.  RP Financial  excluded  three
mutual holding  companies which otherwise met the foregoing  criteria due to the
lack  of  seasoned  trading  history  and  reported  financial  statements  as a
publicly-traded company. The analysis of comparable publicly-traded institutions
included  an  evaluation  of  the  average  and  median   price-to-earnings  and
price-to-book value ratios indicated by the market prices of the peer companies.
RP  Financial  applied the peer group's  pricing  ratios as adjusted for certain
qualitative  valuation factors to account for differences between Kearny and the
peer  group,  to  Kearny's  pro forma  earnings  and book  value to  derive  the
estimated pro forma market value of Kearny.

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         The   Board  of   Directors   reviewed   the   methodologies   and  the
appropriateness  of the  assumptions  used by RP  Financial  in  addition to the
factors listed above, and the Board of Directors believes that these assumptions
were reasonable.  On the basis of the foregoing, RP Financial has advised Kearny
Financial  Corp. and Kearny in its opinion,  dated  November 26, 2004,  that the
estimated pro forma market value of Kearny Financial Corp. on a  fully-converted
basis  ranged  from a minimum of $467.5  million to a maximum of $632.5  million
with a midpoint of $550.0 million.  The Board of Directors of Kearny  determined
that the common stock should be sold at $10.00 per share. Based on the estimated
valuation  and the $10.00 per share price,  the number of shares of common stock
that Kearny  Financial  Corp. will issue will range from a minimum of 46,750,000
shares to a maximum of 63,250,000 shares,  with a midpoint of 55,000,000 shares.
The  Board  determined  to  offer  for  sale 30% of  these  shares,  or  between
14,025,000 shares and 18,975,000  shares,  with a midpoint of 16,500,000 shares,
to  depositors of Kearny,  to the Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank  Employee  Stock
Ownership Plan and, if a community  offering is held, to the public.  The 70% of
the shares of Kearny  Financial Corp. stock that are not offered for sale in the
offering will be issued to Kearny MHC.

         The estimated  valuation  range may be amended with the approval of the
Office of Thrift  Supervision or if necessitated  by subsequent  developments in
the  financial  condition  of  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and  Kearny  or  market
conditions  generally.  In the event the estimated valuation range is updated to
amend the value of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  on a  fully-converted  basis  below
$467.5 million,  which is the minimum of the estimated valuation range, or above
$727.4  million,  which is the  maximum of the  estimated  valuation  range,  as
adjusted  by 15%,  a new  appraisal  will be filed  with the  Office  of  Thrift
Supervision.

         Based upon current market and financial conditions and recent practices
and  policies of the Office of Thrift  Supervision,  if Kearny  Financial  Corp.
receives orders for common stock in excess of $189.8 million (the maximum of the
estimated  valuation  range of shares to be sold to the public) and up to $218.2
million (the maximum of the  estimated  valuation  range of shares to be sold to
the public, as adjusted by 15%), the Office of Thrift Supervision may require it
to accept all such orders. We cannot guarantee,  however,  that Kearny Financial
Corp.  will  receive  orders  for common  stock in excess of the  maximum of the
estimated  valuation  range of shares to be sold to the public or that,  if such
orders are  received,  that all such  orders  will be  accepted  because  Kearny
Financial  Corp.'s  final  valuation  and the  number of shares to be issued are
subject to the receipt of an updated  appraisal from RP Financial which reflects
such an increase in the  valuation and the approval of an increase by the Office
of Thrift  Supervision.  In addition,  an increase in the number of shares to be
sold to the public above 18,975,000 shares will first be used, if necessary,  to
fill the order of the employee stock ownership  plan.  There is no obligation or
understanding  on the part of  management  to take  and/or pay for any shares in
order to complete the stock offering.

         The following  table presents a summary of selected  pricing ratios for
the  peer  group  companies  on  a  fully-converted   basis  and  the  resulting
fully-converted  pricing ratios for Kearny  Financial  Corp.  reflecting the pro
forma impact of the stock offering. Compared to the median pricing ratios of the
peer group, Kearny Financial Corp.'s pro forma pricing ratios at the midpoint of
the offering range indicated a premium of 50.2% on a price-to-earnings  basis, a
discount  of  24.7% on a  price-to-tangible  book  value  basis.  The  estimated
appraised value and the resulting  premiums or discounts took into consideration
the potential financial impact of the stock offering.

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                                                               Pro Forma Price
                                                  ---------------------------------------
                                                     Reported                  Tangible
                                                     Earnings    Book Value   Book Value
                                                   Multiple(1)      Ratio        Ratio
                                                   -----------      -----        -----
                                                                        
Kearny Financial Corp. (pro forma, on a fully-
converted basis):
    Minimum.......................................    31.1x         67.9%        77.3%
    Midpoint......................................    35.9x         71.3%        80.1%
    Maximum.......................................    41.0x         75.1%        83.4%
    Maximum, as adjusted..........................    47.4x         80.3%        88.6%
All fully-converted publicly-traded thrifts
  as of November 26, 2004:
    Average.......................................    18.5x        164.8%       180.0%
    Median........................................    17.5x        155.5%       170.4%
Valuation of peer group as of November 26, 2004
  (on a fully-converted basis):
    Average.......................................    26.1x        100.8%       106.1%
    Median........................................    23.9x        100.8%       106.4%



------------------
(1)  The price-to-earnings multiples set forth in the above table do not reflect
     the recognition of  compensation  expense in connection with stock options.
     New accounting guidance issued by the Financial  Accounting Standards Board
     in December 2004 requires the recognition of  compensation  expense related
     to stock  options  outstanding  based upon the fair value of such awards at
     the  date of grant  over the  period  that  such  awards  are  earned.  The
     implementation of this accounting  guidance will have a significant  impact
     on  pricing  ratios  of  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and will  likely  have a
     significant  impact  on the peer  group  companies  as well.  The pro forma
     information  presented on pages 24 to 30 reflects an estimated  expense for
     the stock option plan that may be adopted by Kearny Financial Corp. and the
     resulting  effect on the pro forma  price-to-earnings  multiples for Kearny
     Financial Corp.

         RP Financial's valuation is not intended, and must not be construed, as
a  recommendation  of any  kind  as to the  advisability  of  purchasing  Kearny
Financial  Corp.'s  shares.  RP  Financial  did  not  independently  verify  the
consolidated  financial statements and other information provided by Kearny, nor
did RP Financial value  independently  the assets or liabilities of Kearny.  The
valuation considers Kearny as a going concern and should not be considered as an
indication of the liquidation value of Kearny. Moreover,  because this valuation
is necessarily based upon estimates and projections of a number of matters,  all
of which are subject to change from time to time, no assurance can be given that
persons purchasing common stock in the offerings will thereafter be able to sell
such  shares at prices  at or above  the  purchase  price or in the range of the
valuation described above.

         No  sale of  shares  of  common  stock  in the  stock  offering  may be
completed  unless RP Financial  confirms  that nothing of a material  nature has
occurred which would cause it to conclude that the aggregate value of the common
stock to be issued is materially incompatible with the estimate of the aggregate
consolidated  pro forma market value of Kearny  Financial  Corp. and Kearny.  If
this confirmation is not received, we may cancel the stock offering,  extend the
offering  period and  establish a new  estimated  valuation  and offering  range
and/or estimated price range, extend,  reopen or hold a new offering or take any
other action the Office of Thrift Supervision may permit.

         Depending  upon market or financial  conditions  following the start of
the  subscription  offering,  the total  number of shares of common  stock to be
issued may be increased or decreased without a resolicitation

                                       132



of  subscribers,  provided that the product of the total number of shares issued
times the  purchase  price is not below the  minimum  or more than 15% above the
maximum of the  estimated  valuation  range.  If market or financial  conditions
change so as to cause the aggregate value of the common stock to be issued to be
below the minimum of the  estimated  valuation  range or more than 15% above the
maximum of this  range,  purchasers  will be  resolicited  and be  permitted  to
continue  their  orders,  in  which  case  they  will  need to  reconfirm  their
subscriptions  prior to the expiration of the  resolicitation  offering or their
subscription  funds will be promptly refunded with interest,  or be permitted to
modify or rescind their  subscriptions.  Any change in the  estimated  valuation
range must be approved by the Office of Thrift Supervision.

         An increase  in the number of shares of common  stock to be issued as a
result of an increase in the  estimated  pro forma market  value would  decrease
both a subscriber's  ownership  interest and Kearny Financial  Corp.'s pro forma
net income and  stockholders'  equity on a per share basis while  increasing pro
forma net income and  stockholders'  equity on an aggregate basis. A decrease in
the  number  of  shares  of common  stock to be  issued  would  increase  both a
subscriber's  ownership  interest  and Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  pro forma net
income and stockholders'  equity on a per share basis while decreasing pro forma
net income and stockholders' equity on an aggregate basis.

         Copies  of  the  appraisal  report  of  RP  Financial,   including  any
amendments,  and the detailed  report of the appraiser  setting forth the method
and  assumptions  for the appraisal  are  available  for  inspection at the main
office of Kearny and the other locations specified under Where You Can Find More
Information. In addition, the appraisal report is an exhibit to the registration
statement of which this  prospectus  is a part.  The  registration  statement is
available on the SEC's website (http://www.sec.gov).

Plan of Distribution/Marketing Arrangements

         Offering  materials have been initially  distributed to certain persons
by mail, with  additional  copies made available  through the stock  information
center and Sandler  O'Neill.  All prospective  purchasers are to send payment to
the stock  information  center  and such  funds will be  deposited  with  Kearny
Federal  Savings Bank and held in a separate  account  earning  interest and not
released  until  the  offering  is  completed  or  terminated.  We  may,  at our
discretion, determine during the offering period that it is in the best interest
of Kearny Federal Savings Bank to hold  subscription  funds in an escrow account
at another insured  financial  institution  instead of at Kearny Federal Savings
Bank.

         We have engaged Sandler  O'Neill,  a broker-dealer  registered with the
National Association of Securities Dealers, as a financial and marketing advisor
in connection  with the offering of our common  stock.  In its role as financial
and  marketing  advisor,  Sandler  O'Neill  will  assist us in the  offering  as
follows:

o    consulting as to the securities marketing implications of any aspect of the
     plan of stock issuance;

o    reviewing with our Board of Directors the securities marketing implications
     of the independent appraiser's appraisal of the common stock;

o    reviewing all offering  documents,  including the  prospectus,  stock order
     forms  and  related   offering   materials  (we  are  responsible  for  the
     preparation and filing of such documents);

o    assisting in the design and  implementation of a marketing strategy for the
     offering;

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o    assisting  us in  scheduling  and  preparing  for meetings  with  potential
     investors and broker-dealers; and

o    providing  such other  general  advice  and  assistance  we may  request to
     promote the successful completion of the offering.

         For these  services,  Sandler O'Neill will receive a fee of 1.0% of the
aggregate  dollar  amount  of the  common  stock  sold in the  subscription  and
community offerings if the stock issuance is consummated, excluding in each case
shares  purchased  by our  tax  qualified  employee  benefit  plans  and  shares
purchased by our directors, officers and employees and their immediate families.

         The plan of stock issuance  provides that, if necessary,  all shares of
common stock not purchased in the subscription  offering and community  offering
may be offered for sale to the general public in a syndicated community offering
to be managed by Sandler O'Neill.  In such capacity,  Sandler O'Neill may form a
syndicate of other  broker-dealers.  Neither  Sandler O'Neill nor any registered
broker-dealer  will have any  obligation  to take or purchase  any shares of the
common stock in the syndicated community offering;  however, Sandler O'Neill has
agreed to use its best efforts in the sale of shares in any syndicated community
offering.  If there is a syndicated  community  offering,  Sandler  O'Neill will
receive a management  fee of 1.0% of the  aggregate  dollar amount of the common
stock sold in the  syndicated  community  offering.  The total  fees  payable to
Sandler  O'Neill and other  National  Association  of Securities  Dealers member
firms  in the  syndicated  community  offering  shall  not  exceed  5.5%  of the
aggregate  dollar  amount of the common stock sold in the  syndicated  community
offering.

         We also will reimburse Sandler O'Neill for its reasonable out-of-pocket
expenses  (including  legal fees and  expenses)  associated  with its  marketing
effort,  up to a maximum of $80,000 for which we have made an advance payment of
$25,000 to Sandler  O'Neill.  If the plan of stock  issuance is terminated or if
Sandler  O'Neill  terminates  its  agreement  with  us in  accordance  with  the
provisions of the agreement,  Sandler O'Neill will only receive reimbursement of
its reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. We will indemnify Sandler O'Neill against
liabilities  and expenses  (including  legal fees)  incurred in connection  with
certain claims or litigation  arising out of or based upon untrue  statements or
omissions  contained in the offering  material for the common  stock,  including
liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933.

         In addition,  we have engaged  Sandler O'Neill to act as stock offering
agent in connection  with the  offering.  In its role as stock  offering  agent,
Sandler O'Neill will assist us in the offering as follows:  (i) consolidation of
accounts and  development  of a central file;  (ii)  preparation of order and/or
request forms;  (iii)  organization  and  supervision  of the stock  information
center; and (iv) subscription services. For these services, Sandler O'Neill will
receive a fee of $60,000  and  reimbursement  for its  reasonable  out-of-pocket
expenses up to a maximum of $20,000. For these services, we have made an advance
payment of $10,000 to Sandler O'Neill.

         Our   directors  and  executive   officers  may   participate   in  the
solicitation  of offers to purchase  common stock.  Other trained  employees may
participate in the offering in ministerial  capacities,  providing clerical work
in effecting a sales transaction or answering questions of a ministerial nature.
Other questions of prospective purchasers will be directed to executive officers
or registered  representatives of Sandler O'Neill. We will rely on Rule 3a4-1 of
the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 so as to permit  officers,  directors  and
employees to participate in the sale of our common stock.  No officer,  director
or employee will be compensated for his or her  participation  by the payment of
commissions  or other  remuneration  based either  directly or indirectly on the
transactions in the common stock.

                                       134



         The  offering  will  comply  with  the   requirements   of  Rule  10b-9
promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Restrictions on Transferability by Directors and Executive Officers

         Shares of the common  stock  purchased  by our  directors  or executive
officers  cannot be sold for a period of one year  following  completion  of the
offering,  except  for a  disposition  of shares  after  death.  To ensure  this
restriction  is  upheld,  shares of the common  stock  issued to  directors  and
executive  officers  will  bear a legend  restricting  their  sale.  Appropriate
instructions  will be issued to the transfer  agent with  respect to  applicable
restrictions  on transfer  of such stock.  Any shares  issued to  directors  and
executive officers as a stock dividend, stock split or otherwise with respect to
restricted stock will be subject to the same restriction.

         For a period of three years  following the offering,  our directors and
executive  officers and their  associates may not, without the prior approval of
the Office of Thrift Supervision, purchase our common stock except from a broker
or dealer registered with the SEC. This prohibition does not apply to negotiated
transactions including more than 1% of our common stock or purchases made by tax
qualified  or  non-tax  qualified  employee  stock  benefit  plans  which may be
attributable to individual directors or executive officers.

         We  have  filed  with  the   Securities   and  Exchange   Commission  a
registration  statement under the Securities Act of 1933 for the registration of
the common stock to be issued in the offering.  This registration does not cover
the resale of the shares.  Shares of common  stock  purchased by persons who are
not affiliates of us may be resold without registration.  Shares purchased by an
affiliate of us will have resale  restrictions  under Rule 144 of the Securities
Act. If we meet the current public  information  requirements  of Rule 144, each
affiliate of ours who complies with the other conditions of Rule 144,  including
those that require the  affiliate's  sale to be aggregated with those of certain
other persons, would be able to sell in the public market, without registration,
a number of shares not to exceed, in any three-month  period,  the greater of 1%
of our outstanding  shares or the average weekly volume of trading in the shares
during the  preceding  four  calendar  weeks.  We may make future  provisions to
permit  affiliates to have their shares registered for sale under the Securities
Act under certain circumstances.

Restrictions on Agreements or Understandings  Regarding Transfer of Common Stock
to be Purchased in the Offering

         Before the  completion  of the  offering,  no depositor may transfer or
enter into an agreement or understanding to transfer any subscription  rights or
the legal or beneficial  ownership of the shares of common stock to be purchased
in the offering. Depositors who submit an order form will be required to certify
that their purchase of common stock is solely for their own account and there is
no agreement or understanding regarding the sale or transfer of their shares. We
intend to pursue any and all legal and equitable  remedies after we become aware
of any  agreement  or  understanding,  and will not honor  orders we  reasonably
believe to involve an agreement or understanding  regarding the sale or transfer
of shares.

Effects of the Stock Offering

         General.  The stock offering will not have any effect on Kearny Federal
Savings Bank's present business of accepting deposits and investing its funds in
loans and other investments permitted by law. The stock offering will not result
in any change in the existing services provided to depositors and borrowers,  or
in existing offices,  management,  and staff.  After the stock offering,  Kearny
Federal Savings Bank will

                                       135



continue to be subject to regulation, supervision, and examination by the Office
of Thrift Supervision and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

         Deposits and Loans.  Each holder of a deposit account in Kearny Federal
Savings  Bank at the time of the stock  offering  will  continue  as an  account
holder in Kearny Federal  Savings Bank after the stock  offering,  and the stock
offering will not affect the deposit balance, interest rate or other terms. Each
deposit account will be insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation to
the same extent as before the stock  offering.  Depositors will continue to hold
their existing certificates,  savings records,  checkbooks and other evidence of
their  accounts.  The stock  offering  will not affect the loans of any borrower
from Kearny Federal Savings Bank. The amount, interest rate, maturity,  security
for, and  obligations  under each loan will remain  contractually  fixed as they
existed prior to the stock offering.

         Voting Rights. As a federally  chartered stock savings bank, all voting
rights of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank are held solely by its sole  stockholder,
Kearny  Financial  Corp.  All voting rights of Kearny  Financial  Corp. are held
solely by its sole stockholder,  Kearny MHC. All voting rights of Kearny MHC are
held by the depositors and certain  borrowers of Kearny Federal  Savings Bank at
the  applicable  record date.  After the stock  offering,  the voting  rights of
Kearny Financial Corp. will be held by its  stockholders.  Kearny MHC will own a
majority of the outstanding common stock of Kearny Financial Corp., and thus the
Board of Directors of Kearny MHC, which is comprised of the same individuals who
are  directors  of Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  will control the affairs of Kearny
Financial Corp., including the election of directors of Kearny Financial Corp.

         Material  Federal  and  State Tax  Consequences.  We have  received  an
opinion from Malizia Spidi & Fisch, PC on the material  federal tax consequences
of the stock offering to Kearny  Financial  Corp.,  the purchasers of its common
stock and the recipients of  subscription  rights to purchase such common stock.
The opinion has been filed as an exhibit to the registration  statement of which
this prospectus is a part and covers those federal tax matters that are material
to the  transaction.  Such opinion is made in reliance upon various  statements,
representations  and  declarations as to matters of fact made by us, as detailed
in the opinion. The opinion provides that:

          o    we will  recognize  no gain or loss upon the  receipt of money in
               exchange for shares of common stock; and

          o    no gain or loss will be recognized by Eligible  Account  Holders,
               Supplemental  Eligible  Account Holders or Other Members upon the
               distribution to them of the  nontransferable  subscription rights
               to purchase shares of common stock.

         The opinion in the second bullet above is predicated on representations
from Kearny Federal Savings Bank,  Kearny Financial Corp. and Kearny MHC that no
person shall receive any payment,  whether in money or property,  in lieu of the
issuance of subscription  rights. The opinion in the second bullet above is also
based on the position that the subscription  rights to purchase shares of common
stock  received by  Eligible  Account  Holders,  Supplemental  Eligible  Account
Holders and Other  Members have a fair market value of zero.  In reaching  their
opinion stated in the second bullet above,  Malizia Spidi & Fisch,  PC has noted
that the subscription rights will be granted at no cost to the recipients,  will
be  legally  non-transferable  and of  short  duration,  and  will  provide  the
recipients  with the right only to purchase  shares of common  stock at the same
price to be paid by members of the  general  public in any  community  offering.
Malizia Spidi & Fisch, PC believes that it is more likely than not that the fair
market  value of the  subscription  rights  to  purchase  common  stock is zero.
Malizia  Spidi & Fisch,  PC has noted in its opinion  that they are not aware of
the Internal Revenue Service claiming in any similar transaction that

                                       136



subscription  rights  have any  market  value.  In that  there  are no  judicial
opinions or official Internal Revenue Service positions on this issue,  however,
such  position  related to  subscription  rights comes to a reasoned  conclusion
instead of an absolute conclusion on these issues. Such conclusion of counsel is
supported  by a letter from RP  Financial  furnished to us which states that the
subscription  rights  do not  have  any  value  when  they  are  distributed  or
exercised.  If the Internal  Revenue  Service  disagrees  with this valuation of
subscription  rights and determines  that such  subscription  rights have value,
income may be recognized by recipients of these rights, in certain cases whether
or not the rights are  exercised.  This  income may be capital  gain or ordinary
income,  and Kearny  Financial Corp. could recognize gain on the distribution of
these rights. Based on the foregoing, Malizia Spidi & Fisch, PC believes that it
is more likely than not that the nontransferable subscription rights to purchase
our common stock have no value.

         We are also  subject to New Jersey  income  taxes and have  received an
opinion from Radics & Co., LLC that the stock  offering  will be treated for New
Jersey state tax  purposes  similar to the  treatment of the stock  offering for
federal tax purposes.

         Unlike a private  letter ruling from the IRS, the federal and state tax
opinions  have no binding  effect or official  status,  and no assurance  can be
given that the  conclusions  reached in any of those opinions would be sustained
by a court if contested by the IRS or the New Jersey tax  authorities.  Eligible
Account  Holders and  Supplemental  Eligible  Account  Holders are encouraged to
consult with their own tax advisers as to the tax  consequences in the event the
subscription rights are determined to have any market value.

Interpretation, Amendment or Termination of the Plan of Stock Offering

         If  determined  to be necessary or desirable by the Board of Directors,
the  plan may be  amended  by a  two-thirds  vote of the  full  Board,  with the
concurrence of the Office of Thrift Supervision. To the extent permitted by law,
all interpretations by us of the plan of stock issuance will be final;  however,
such interpretations have no binding effect on the Office of Thrift Supervision.
The plan of stock issuance  provides that, if deemed necessary or desirable,  we
may substantively  amend the plan of stock issuance as a result of comments from
regulatory authorities or otherwise.

         Completion  of the  offering  requires  the sale of all  shares  of the
common stock within ninety days following approval of the plan of stock issuance
by the  Office of Thrift  Supervision,  unless an  extension  is  granted by the
Office of Thrift  Supervision.  If this condition is not satisfied,  the plan of
stock  issuance  will be terminated  and we will  continue our business.  We may
terminate the plan of stock issuance at any time.

Conditions to the Offering

         Completion of the offering is subject to several factors, including:

1.       the  receipt  of all the  required  approvals  of the  Office of Thrift
         Supervision for the issuance of common stock in the offering, and

2.       the sale of a minimum of 14,025,000 shares of common stock.

         If such  conditions  are not met before we complete the  offering,  all
funds  received  will be promptly  returned  with  interest  and all  withdrawal
authorizations  will be  canceled.  The  stock  purchases  of our  officers  and
directors will be counted for purposes of meeting the minimum number of shares.

                                       137



              RESTRICTIONS ON ACQUISITION OF KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP.

General

         The principal federal regulatory  restrictions which affect the ability
of any person,  firm or entity to acquire Kearny Financial Corp., Kearny Federal
Savings  Bank or their  respective  capital  stock  are  described  below.  Also
discussed are certain  provisions in Kearny Financial Corp.'s charter and bylaws
which may be deemed to affect the ability of a person, firm or entity to acquire
Kearny Financial Corp.

Statutory and Regulatory Restrictions on Acquisition

         The Change in Bank Control Act provides that no person, acting directly
or  indirectly  or  through or in concert  with one or more other  persons,  may
acquire control of a savings institution unless the Office of Thrift Supervision
has been given 60 days prior written notice.  The Home Owners' Loan Act provides
that no company may acquire "control" of a savings institution without the prior
approval of the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  Any company that  acquires  such
control  becomes a savings and loan  holding  company  subject to  registration,
examination  and  regulation  by the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  Pursuant to
federal regulations,  control of a savings institution is conclusively deemed to
have been acquired by, among other things,  the  acquisition of more than 25% of
any class of voting  stock of the  institution  or the  ability to  control  the
election of a majority of the directors of an institution.  Moreover, control is
presumed to have been  acquired,  subject to rebuttal,  upon the  acquisition of
more than 10% of any class of voting stock,  or of more than 25% of any class of
stock of a savings  institution,  where certain enumerated "control factors" are
also present in the acquisition.

         The Office of Thrift Supervision may prohibit an acquisition of control
if:

o    it would result in a monopoly or substantially lessen competition;

o    the  financial  condition  of the  acquiring  person might  jeopardize  the
     financial stability of the institution; or

o    the competence,  experience or integrity of the acquiring  person indicates
     that it would not be in the interest of the  depositors or of the public to
     permit the acquisition of control by such person.

         These  restrictions  do not  apply  to  the  acquisition  of a  savings
institution's capital stock by one or more tax-qualified  employee stock benefit
plans, provided that the plans do not have beneficial ownership of more than 25%
of any class of equity security of the savings institution.

         For a period of three years following completion of the stock issuance,
Office of Thrift  Supervision  regulations  generally  prohibit  any person from
acquiring or making an offer to acquire beneficial ownership of more than 10% of
the stock of Kearny  Financial  Corp.  or Kearny  Federal  Savings  Bank without
Office of Thrift Supervision approval.

Charter and Bylaws of Kearny Financial Corp.

         The  following  discussion  is a summary of certain  provisions  of the
charter  and  bylaws  of  Kearny   Financial  Corp.  that  relate  to  corporate
governance. The description is necessarily general and qualified by reference to
the charter and bylaws.

                                       138



         Classified  Board of  Directors.  The  Board  of  Directors  of  Kearny
Financial  Corp.  is required by the bylaws to be divided  into three  staggered
classes as equal in size as is  possible,  with one class  elected  annually  by
stockholders for three-year  terms. A classified  board promotes  continuity and
stability of management of Kearny  Financial  Corp., but makes it more difficult
for  stockholders  to change a majority of the  directors  because it  generally
takes at least two annual  elections of directors  for this to occur.  Directors
are elected by a  plurality  of votes  cast,  and because  Kearny MHC will own a
majority of the common stock, it will control the election of directors.

         Authorized but Unissued  Shares of Capital  Stock.  Following the stock
offering,  Kearny  Financial  Corp.  will have authorized but unissued shares of
preferred stock and common stock.  See Description of Capital Stock on page 140.
Although  these  shares  could  be used by the  Board  of  Directors  of  Kearny
Financial  Corp. to make it more difficult or to discourage an attempt to obtain
control of Kearny Financial Corp. through a merger,  tender offer, proxy contest
or  otherwise,  it is unlikely that we would use or need to use shares for these
purposes because Kearny MHC will own a majority of the common stock.

         Special  Meetings of  Stockholders.  Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  bylaws
provide that special meetings of stockholders may be called only by the chairman
of the board,  the president,  or a majority of the Board of Directors,  or upon
the  written  request of the  holders of not less than  one-tenth  of all of the
outstanding stock of Kearny Financial Corp.

         How Shares are Voted.  Kearny  Financial  Corp.'s  bylaws  provide that
there will not be cumulative  voting by stockholders  for the election of Kearny
Financial Corp.'s directors.  No cumulative voting rights means that Kearny MHC,
as the holder of a majority  of the shares  eligible to be voted at a meeting of
stockholders, may elect all directors of Kearny Financial Corp. to be elected at
that meeting.  This could prevent minority stockholder  representation on Kearny
Financial Corp.'s Board of Directors.

         Procedures for Stockholder Nominations. Kearny Financial Corp.'s bylaws
provide that any  stockholder  wanting to make a nomination  for the election of
directors or a proposal for new business at a meeting of stockholders  must send
written  notice to the  Secretary of Kearny  Financial  Corp. at least five days
before the date of the annual  meeting.  The bylaws  further  provide  that if a
stockholder wanting to make a nomination or a proposal for new business does not
follow the prescribed  procedures,  the proposal will not be considered until an
adjourned,  special,  or annual meeting of the stockholders  taking place thirty
days or more thereafter. Management believes that it is in the best interests of
Kearny  Financial  Corp.  and  its  stockholders  to  provide  enough  time  for
management to disclose to  stockholders  information  about a dissident slate of
nominations  for  directors.  This  advance  notice  requirement  may also  give
management time to solicit its own proxies in an attempt to defeat any dissident
slate  of  nominations  if  management  thinks  it is in the  best  interest  of
stockholders  generally.  Similarly,  adequate  advance  notice  of  stockholder
proposals  will give  management  time to study such  proposals and to determine
whether to recommend to the stockholders that such proposals be adopted.

         Indemnification.   Kearny   Financial   Corp.'s   bylaws   provide  for
indemnification  of its officers,  directors and employees to the fullest extent
authorized by the regulations of the Office of Thrift Supervision.

                                       139



                          DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

General

         Kearny  Financial  Corp. is authorized  to issue  75,000,000  shares of
common  stock,  par  value  $0.10  per  share  and  25,000,000  shares of serial
preferred  stock, par value $0.10 per share. We currently expect to have between
46,750,000  and  63,250,000  shares of common  stock,  subject to an increase to
72,737,500 shares,  outstanding after the stock offering,  including shares that
will be held by Kearny MHC. Upon payment of the purchase  price shares of common
stock issued in the offering will be fully paid and non- assessable.  Each share
of common stock will have the same relative  rights as, and will be identical in
all  respects  with,  each other share of common  stock.  The common  stock will
represent non-withdrawable capital, will not be an account of insurable type and
will not be insured by the Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation or any other
governmental  agency. The Board of Directors can, without stockholder  approval,
issue additional  shares of common stock,  although Kearny MHC, so long as it is
in existence, must own a majority of Kearny Financial Corp.'s outstanding shares
of common stock.

Common Stock

         Distributions. Kearny Financial Corp. can pay dividends if, as and when
declared by its Board of Directors, subject to compliance with limitations which
are imposed by law. See Our Policy  Regarding  Dividends on page 22. The holders
of common stock of Kearny  Financial Corp. will be entitled to receive and share
equally in such dividends as may be declared by the Board of Directors of Kearny
Financial Corp. out of funds legally  available  therefor.  If Kearny  Financial
Corp.  issues  preferred stock, the holders thereof may have a priority over the
holders of the common stock with respect to dividends.

         Voting  Rights.  The  holders of common  stock will  possess  exclusive
voting  rights in Kearny  Financial  Corp.  The holder of shares of common stock
will be  entitled  to one vote for each  share  held on all  matters  subject to
stockholder  vote and will not have any right to cumulate  votes in the election
of directors.

         Liquidation  Rights. In the event of any liquidation,  dissolution,  or
winding-up of Kearny  Financial Corp., the holders of the common stock generally
would be entitled  to receive,  after  payment of all debts and  liabilities  of
Kearny  Financial  Corp.  (including all debts and liabilities of Kearny Federal
Savings Bank), all assets of Kearny Financial Corp.  available for distribution.
If preferred  stock is issued,  the holders thereof may have a priority over the
holders of the common stock in the event of liquidation or dissolution.

         Preemptive Rights; Redemption.  Because the holders of the common stock
do not have any  preemptive  rights with respect to any shares Kearny  Financial
Corp.  may issue,  the Board of  Directors  may sell shares of capital  stock of
Kearny   Financial  Corp.   without  first  offering  such  shares  to  existing
stockholders. The common stock will not be subject to any redemption provisions.

Preferred Stock

         We are authorized to issue up to 25,000,000  shares of serial preferred
stock and to fix and state voting powers,  designations,  preferences,  or other
special  rights of  preferred  stock  and the  qualifications,  limitations  and
restrictions  of those  shares as the Board of  Directors  may  determine in its
discretion.  Preferred stock may be issued in distinctly  designated series, may
be  convertible  into common  stock and may rank prior to the common stock as to
dividends rights, liquidation preferences, or both, and may have

                                       140



full or limited voting rights.  The issuance of preferred  stock could adversely
affect the voting and other rights of holders of common stock.

         The  authorized  but  unissued   shares  of  preferred  stock  and  the
authorized but unissued and unreserved  shares of common stock will be available
for issuance in future mergers or  acquisitions,  in future public  offerings or
private  placements.  Except as otherwise required to approve the transaction in
which the additional  authorized  shares of preferred stock would be issued,  no
stockholder  approval  generally  would be  required  for the  issuance of these
shares.

                             LEGAL AND TAX OPINIONS

         The  legality  of the  issuance of the common  stock being  offered and
certain  matters  relating to the stock  offering and federal  taxation  will be
passed  upon for us by  Malizia  Spidi & Fisch,  PC,  Washington,  D.C.  Matters
relating to state taxation will be passed upon for us by Radics & Co., LLC, Pine
Brook, New Jersey. Certain legal matters will be passed upon for Sandler O'Neill
& Partners, L.P. by Thacher Proffitt & Wood LLP, New York.

                                     EXPERTS

         The consolidated financial statements of Kearny Financial Corp. at June
30, 2004 and 2003 and for each of the years in the three year period  ended June
30, 2004 have been  included in this  prospectus  in reliance upon the report of
Radics  & Co.,  LLC,  appearing  elsewhere  in this  prospectus,  and  upon  the
authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.

         RP Financial, LC has consented to the publication in this document of a
summary of its letter to Kearny Financial Corp.  setting forth its conclusion as
to the  estimated  pro  forma  market  value of the  common  stock  and has also
consented to the use of its name and statements  with respect to it appearing in
this document.

                            REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS

         Prior to completion of the offering,  we will register our common stock
with the SEC pursuant to Section 12(g) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended. We will be subject to the information,  proxy solicitation,  insider
trading   restrictions,   tender  offer  rules,  periodic  reporting  and  other
requirements  of the SEC under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934. We will not
deregister  the common  stock under the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 for a
period of at least three years following the stock offering.

                    WHERE YOU CAN FIND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

         We have filed with the SEC a  registration  statement on Form S-1 under
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, with respect to the common stock offered
in this  document.  As permitted by the rules and  regulations  of the SEC, this
document  does not contain  all the  information  set forth in the  registration
statement.  The statements  contained in this document as to the contents of any
contract  or other  document  filed  as an  exhibit  to the  Form  S-1  are,  of
necessity,  brief descriptions.  The registration  statement and exhibits can be
examined without charge at the public reference facilities of the SEC located at
450 Fifth Street, N.W.,  Washington,  D.C. 20549, and copies of the registration
materials  can be  obtained  from the SEC at  prescribed  rates.  You may obtain
information   on  the  operation  of  the  Public   Reference  Room  by  calling
1-800-SEC-0330.  The SEC also maintains a web site that contains reports,  proxy
and information

                                       141



statements  and  other  information  regarding  registrants,   including  Kearny
Financial Corp., that file electronically with the SEC. The address for this web
site is http://www.sec.gov.

         We have filed an  application  for approval of the stock  issuance with
the Office of Thrift  Supervision.  This  prospectus  omits certain  information
contained in that  application.  That information can be examined without charge
at the public reference  facilities of the Office of Thrift Supervision  located
at 1700 G Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20552.

         A copy of our charter and bylaws, filed as exhibits to the registration
statement  as well as those of Kearny  Federal  Savings Bank and Kearny MHC, are
available without charge from Kearny Financial Corp. Copies of the plan of stock
issuance are also available without charge.

                                       142



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES



                   Index to Consolidated Financial Statements





                                                                                  
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm...........................................F-1

Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition
         as of September 30, 2004 (unaudited) and June 30, 2004 and 2003 (audited) .............. F-2

Consolidated Statements of Income
         for the Three Months Ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 (unaudited) and
         the Years Ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002 (audited)...................................F-3

Consolidated Statements of Changes in  Stockholders'  Equity for the Years Ended
         June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002 (audited) and
         for the Three Months Ended September 30, 2004 (unaudited)................................F-4

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
         for the Three Months Ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 (unaudited) and
         the Years Ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002 (audited)............................ F-5 - F-6

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements................................................ F-7 - F-49




         All  schedules  are omitted as the required  information  either is not
applicable or is included in the  consolidated  financial  statements or related
notes.

                                                        143



             REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
             -------------------------------------------------------




To The Board of Directors
Kearny Financial Corp. and Subsidiaries


We have audited the accompanying  consolidated statements of financial condition
of Kearny  Financial Corp. (the "Company") and  Subsidiaries as of June 30, 2004
and  2003,  and the  related  consolidated  statements  of  income,  changes  in
stockholders'  equity  and cash  flows for each of the  years in the  three-year
period ended June 30, 2004.  These  consolidated  financial  statements  are the
responsibility  of management.  Our  responsibility  is to express an opinion on
these consolidated financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted  our audits in  accordance  with  auditing  standards of the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that
we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable  assurance about whether the
consolidated  financial statements are free of material  misstatement.  An audit
includes  examining,  on a test  basis,  evidence  supporting  the  amounts  and
disclosures in the  consolidated  financial  statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall consolidated  financial statement
presentation. We believe our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the consolidated  financial statements referred to in the second
preceding  paragraph present fairly, in all material respects,  the consolidated
financial position of the Company and Subsidiaries as of June 30, 2004 and 2003,
and the consolidated  results of their operations and cash flows for each of the
years in the  three-  year  period  ended  June 30,  2004,  in  conformity  with
accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.




/s/Radics & Co., LLC

Pine Brook, New Jersey
August 9, 2004

                                      F-1


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
                 ----------------------------------------------
                 (In Thousands, Except Share and Per Share Data)



                                                                                                                 June 30,
                                                                                          September 30,   --------------------------
                                                                             Notes             2004           2004          2003
                                                                       ----------------  ---------------  ------------  ------------
                                                                                                               
                                                                                             (Unaudited)
Assets

Cash and amounts due from depository institutions                                             $ 17,937       $ 21,008     $ 25,291
Interest-bearing deposits in other banks                                                        18,926         18,480       89,366
Federal funds sold                                                                                   -              -       11,000
Securities purchased under agreements to resell                                                      -              -      200,000
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
       Cash and cash equivalents                                          1, 3 and 17           36,863         39,488      325,657

Securities available for sale                                             1, 4 and 17           41,335         41,564       37,840
Investment securities held to maturity                                  1, 5, 12 and 17        445,769        435,870      287,321
Loans receivable, including net deferred loan costs of $805, $758
  and $1,927                                                              1, 6 and 17          520,486        510,938      514,341
   Less:  Allowance for loan losses                                         1 and 6             (5,290)        (5,144)      (5,180)
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
   Net loans receivable                                                                        515,196        505,794      509,161
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
Mortgage-backed securities held to maturity                               1, 7 and 17          724,876        771,353      681,619
Premises and equipment                                                      1 and 8             28,384         26,649       19,884
Federal Home Loan Bank of  New York stock ("FHLB")                            12                11,392         11,392       13,787
Interest receivable                                                       1, 9 and 17            8,861          9,861        8,479
Goodwill                                                                  1, 2 and 10           82,263         82,263       31,746
Deposit for acquisition of West Essex Bancorp, Inc.                            2                     -              -       67,853
Other assets                                                             10, 15 and 19           9,270         12,284       13,135
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
       Total assets                                                                        $ 1,904,209    $ 1,936,518  $ 1,996,482
                                                                                           ===========    ===========  ===========

Liabilities and stockholders' equity

Liabilities

Deposits:                                                                1, 11 and 17
  Non-interest bearing                                                                          51,065         55,377       48,229
  Interest bearing                                                                           1,459,745      1,482,133    1,565,455
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
       Total deposits                                                                        1,510,810      1,537,510    1,613,684

Advances from FHLB                                                         12 and 17            84,100         94,234       75,749
Advance payments by borrowers for taxes                                                          4,088          4,224        4,213
Other liabilities                                                        1, 13 and 15            7,409          7,045        7,167
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
       Total liabilities                                                                     1,606,407      1,643,013    1,700,813
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
Commitments and contingencies                                            1, 16 and 17

Stockholders' equity                                                 1, 2, 14, 15 and 18

Preferred stock $0.10 par value, 25,000,000 shares authorized;
  none issued and outstanding                                                                        -              -            -
Common stock $0.10 par value, 75,000,000 shares authorized;
  10,000, 10,000 and 11,737 shares issued and outstanding, respectively                              1              1            1
Paid in capital                                                                                    499            499       19,066
Retained earnings - substantially restricted                                                   286,755        282,959      273,970
Unearned Employee Stock Ownership Plan ("ESOP") shares                                               -              -         (663)
Unearned Incentive Plan shares                                                                       -              -         (193)
Treasury stock, at cost; 126 shares at June 30, 2003                                                 -              -       (4,283)
Accumulated other comprehensive income                                                          10,547         10,046        7,771
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
       Total stockholders' equity                                                              297,802        293,505      295,669
                                                                                           -----------    -----------  -----------
       Total liabilities and stockholders' equity                                          $ 1,904,209    $ 1,936,518  $ 1,996,482
                                                                                           ===========    ===========  ===========


See notes to consolidated financial statements.

                                      F-2




                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
         --------------------------------------------------------------
                 (In Thousands, Except Share and Per Share Data)



                                                                    Three Months Ended
                                                                      September 30,             Year Ended June 30,
                                                                   --------------------- -----------------------------------
                                                        Notes         2004       2003      2004          2003        2002
                                                    -----------    --------   ---------- --------      --------   ----------
                                                                       (Unaudited)
                                                                                                        
Interest income:
     Loans                                             1 and 5     $  7,132    $  7,659  $   28,919    $ 36,673   $   43,258
     Mortgage-backed securities                           1           8,649       7,976      33,980      47,764       50,225
     Investment and available for sale securities         1           4,011       3,228      14,426       9,133        9,927
     Other interest earning assets                                      115         793       1,329       2,922        2,752
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
          Total interest income                                      19,907      19,656      78,654      96,492      106,162
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
Interest expense:
     Deposits                                            11           6,112       8,092      28,082      39,908       49,069
     Borrowings                                                         991       1,066       4,018       4,787        5,374
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
          Total interest expense                                      7,103       9,158      32,100      44,695       54,443
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------

Net interest income                                                  12,804      10,498      46,554      51,797       51,719

Provision for loan losses                              1 and 5          151           -           -           -            3
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
Net interest income after provision for loan losses                  12,653      10,498      46,554      51,797       51,716
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
Non-interest income:
     Fees and service charges                                           177         388         681       1,002        1,057
     Trading account income                                               -           -           -           -           62
     Miscellaneous                                                      317          50         879         845          646
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
          Total non-interest income                                     494         438       1,560       1,847        1,765
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
Non-interest expenses:
     Salaries and employee benefits                   1 and 13        4,652       4,194      16,522      16,962       15,468
     Net occupancy expense of premises                 1 and 8          647         577       2,523       2,376        1,968
     Equipment                                            1             874         764       3,453       3,142        2,945
     Advertising                                                        281         262         861         861          642
     Federal insurance premium                                          140         154         587         620          542
     Amortization of goodwill and intangible assets  1, 2 and 10        159         159         636         636        2,947
     Directors' fees                                                    217         198         827         818          383
     Merger related expenses                              2               -         592         592      14,921          619
     Miscellaneous                                                      819         843       3,471       4,016        3,551
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
          Total non-interest expenses                                 7,789       7,743      29,472      44,352       29,065
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
Income before income taxes                                            5,358       3,193      18,642       9,292       24,416
Income taxes                                          1 and 15        1,562         958       5,745       5,237        7,926
                                                                   --------    --------  ----------    --------   ----------
Net income                                                         $  3,796    $  2,235  $   12,897    $  4,055   $   16,490
                                                                   ========    ========  ==========    ========   ==========

Net income per common share:
     Basic                                                         $ 379.60    $ 223.50  $ 1,289.70    $ 337.52   $ 1,294.02
     Diluted                                                         379.60      223.50    1,289.70      336.06     1,287.13
                                                                   ========    ========  ==========    ========   ==========

Weighted average number of common shares outstanding:
     Basic                                                           10,000      10,000      10,000      12,014       12,743
     Diluted                                                         10,000      10,000      10,000      12,066       12,811
                                                                   ========    ========  ==========    ========   ==========


See notes to consolidated financial statements.

                                      F-3


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
           ----------------------------------------------------------
                                 (In Thousands)



                                                                                                                    
                                                             Retained                                          Accumulated 
                                  Common Stock               Earnings -                Unearned                 Other
                                ----------------  Paid in    Substantially  Unearned   Incentive    Treasury  Comprehensive
                                Shares    Amount  Capital    Restricted   ESOP Shares Plan Shares    Stock      Income       Total
                                ------    ------ --------   ----------- -----------   -----------   --------  ------------- -------
                                                                                                   
Balance - June 30, 2001           13       $ 1    $27,739     $257,752     $(971)        $(668)      $(4,047)   $10,304   $290,110
                                                                                                                          --------
Net income for the year
  ended June 30, 2002              -         -           -      16,490         -             -             -          -     16,490

Unrealized loss on 
  securities
  available for sale, 
  net of deferred income
  tax benefit of $693              -         -           -           -         -             -             -     (1,261)    (1,261)
                                                                                                                          --------
Comprehensive income               -         -           -           -         -             -             -          -     15,229
                                                                                                                          --------
ESOP shares committed 
  to be released                   -         -         173           -       160             -             -          -        333

Incentive Plan shares 
  earned                           -         -           -           -         -           249             -          -        249

Treasury stock purchases           -         -           -           -         -             -        (2,530)         -     (2,530)

Treasury stock reissued            -         -          (6)          -         -             -           328          -       322

Cash dividends                     -         -           -      (1,259)        -             -             -          -     (1,259)
                                ----       ---    --------    --------     -----         -----       -------    -------   --------
Balance - June 30, 2002           13         1      27,906     272,983      (811)         (419)       (6,249)     9,043    302,454
                                                                                                                          --------
Net income for the year
  ended June 30, 2003              -         -           -       4,055         -             -             -          -      4,055

Unrealized loss on 
  securities
  available for sale, 
  net of deferred income
  tax benefit of $743              -         -           -           -         -             -             -     (1,272)    (1,272)
                                                                                                                          --------
Comprehensive income               -         -           -           -         -             -             -          -      2,783
                                                                                                                          --------
ESOP shares committed 
  to be released                   -         -         459           -       148             -             -          -        607

Incentive Plan shares
  earned                           -         -           -           -         -           182             -          -        182

Treasury stock reissued            -         -         (20)          -         -             -           365          -        345

Cash dividends declared            -         -           -        (986)        -             -             -          -       (986)

Acquisition of 
  Pulaski Bancorp, Inc.           (1)        -      (9,850)     (2,082)        -            44         1,601          -    (10,287)

Permanent tax benefit 
  related to stock options         -         -         571           -         -             -             -          -        571
                                ----       ---    --------    --------     -----         -----       -------    -------   --------
Balance - June 30, 2003           12         1      19,066     273,970      (663)         (193)       (4,283)     7,771    295,669
                                                                                                                          --------
Net income for the year
  ended June 30, 2004              -         -            -     12,897         -             -             -          -     12,897

Unrealized gain on 
  securities available 
  for sale, net of 
  deferred income
  tax of $1,296                    -         -            -          -         -             -             -      2,275      2,275
                                                                                                                          --------
Comprehensive income               -         -            -          -         -             -             -          -     15,172
                                                                                                                          --------
Acquisition of 
  West Essex Bancorp, Inc.        (2)        -     (18,567)     (3,908)      663           193         4,283          -    (17,336)
                                ----       ---    --------    --------     -----         -----       -------    -------   --------
Balance - June 30, 2004           10         1         499     282,959         -             -             -     10,046    293,505

Net income for the 
  three months ended
  September 30, 2004 
  (unaudited)                      -         -           -       3,796         -             -             -          -      3,796

Unrealized gain on 
  securities available
  for sale, net of 
  deferred income tax
  expense of $269 
  (unaudited)                      -         -           -           -         -             -             -        501        501
                                ----       ---    --------    --------     -----         -----       -------    -------   --------
Balance - September 30, 2004 
  (unaudited)                     10       $ 1    $    499    $286,755         -             -             -    $10,547   $297,802
                                ====       ===    ========    ========     =====         =====       =======    =======   ========


See notes to consolidated financial statements.

                                      F-4


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 (In Thousands)



                                                        Three Months Ended
                                                            September 30,                Year Ended June 30,
                                                       ----------------------  -------------------------------------
                                                           2004       2003         2004         2003          2002
                                                        ---------   ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
                                                            (Unaudited)
                                                                                                
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net income                                        $   3,796    $   2,235    $  12,897    $   4,055    $  16,490
     Adjustments to reconcile net income to
      net cash provided by operating activities:
        Depreciation and amortization of premises and 
          equipment                                          316          329        1,314        1,279        1,172
        Net amortization of premiums, discounts and      
          loan fees and costs                                307          794        2,679        2,260          512
        Deferred income taxes                               (582)          92          556         (734)         (28)
        Amortization of goodwill and intangible assets       159          159          636          636        2,947
        Provision for loan losses                            151            -            -            -            3
        Purchase of trading securities                         -            -            -            -      (23,906)
        Proceeds from sale of trading securities               -            -            -            -       24,733
        Realized gains on trading securities                   -            -            -            -          (31)
        Unrealized gain on trading securities                  -            -            -            -          (31)
        Realized gain on sale of securities 
          available for sale                                 (71)           -            -            -            -
        Decrease (increase) in interest receivable         1,000           88       (1,381)         977          648
        Decrease (increase) in other assets                2,854       (1,329)         (17)      (1,461)      (1,406)
        Increase (decrease) in interest payable               37         (277)        (376)        (375)        (718)
        Increase (decrease) in other liabilities             649           44       (1,705)       1,944          191
        ESOP and Incentive Plan expenses                       -            -            -          789          582
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
            Net cash provided by operating activities      8,616        2,135       14,603        9,370       21,158
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Proceeds from maturity of term deposit                    -            -            -            -          399
     Purchases of securities available for sale              (43)         (36)        (152)        (180)        (254)
     Proceeds from calls of securities 
       available for sale                                      -            -            -            -        1,000
     Proceeds from sale of securities 
       available for sale                                  1,115            -            -            -            -
     Purchases of investment securities
       held to maturity                                  (14,051)    (114,515)    (263,187)    (261,813)     (56,013)
     Proceeds from calls and maturities
       of investment securities held to maturity           3,109       23,159      111,189      108,705      107,082
     Proceeds from repayments of investment securities
       held to maturity                                    1,048          872        3,612       73,154        4,776
     Purchase of loans                                         -            -      (15,024)      (5,687)      (9,584)
     Proceeds on sale of student loans                         -            -            -          338            -
     Net (increase) decrease in loans receivable          (9,592)      18,205       16,922       86,934       20,718
     Purchases of mortgage-backed securities 
       held to maturity                                   (1,308)    (126,652)    (425,124)    (154,799)    (571,751)
     Principal repayments on mortgage-backed securities
       held to maturity                                   47,511      139,052      334,016      371,915      290,490
     Additions to premises and equipment                  (2,051)        (347)      (8,079)      (3,714)      (4,426)
     Redemption (purchase) of FHLB Stock                       -        2,987        2,395        1,954       (1,021)
     Cash paid for acquisition of minority interest 
       in Pulaski Bancorp, Inc.                                -            -            -      (26,433)           -
     Cash paid for acquisition of minority interest
       in West Essex Bancorp, Inc.                             -            -            -      (67,853)           -
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
            Net cash provided by (used in) 
              investing activities                        25,738      (57,275)    (243,432)     122,521     (218,584)
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Net (decrease) increase in deposits                 (26,709)     (39,083)     (75,836)     134,221      138,328
     FHLB advances                                             -            -            -            -       34,000
     Repayment of FHLB advances                             (134)      (1,126)     (11,515)     (36,331)      (9,529)
     Net change in short-term borrowings from FHLB       (10,000)           -       30,000            -      (24,500)
     Increase (decrease) in advance payments by 
       borrowers for taxes                                   (36)        (485)          11         (445)        (320)
     Proceeds from issuance of common stock of 
       West Essex Bancorp, Inc.                                -            -            -          345          277
     Purchase of treasury stock of 
       West Essex Bancorp, Inc.                                -            -            -            -       (2,530)
     Dividends paid to minority stockholders of 
       West Essex Bancorp, Inc. and
       Pulaski Bancorp, Inc.                                   -            -            -       (1,054)      (1,171)
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
            Net cash (used in) provided by 
              financing activities                       (36,979)     (40,694)     (57,340)      96,736      134,555
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents      (2,625)     (95,834)    (286,169)     228,627      (62,871)
Cash and cash equivalents - beginning                     39,488      325,657      325,657       97,030      159,901
                                                       ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Cash and cash equivalents - ending                     $  36,863    $ 229,823    $  39,488    $ 325,657    $  97,030
                                                       =========    =========    =========    =========    =========


See notes to consolidated financial statements.

                                      F-5


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
     ----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 (In Thousands)





                                                              Three Months Ended
                                                                September 30,             Year Ended June 30,
                                                              ------------------    --------------------------------
                                                               2004       2003        2004        2003       2002
                                                             --------   --------    --------    --------   --------
                                                                 (Unaudited)  
                                                                                               
Supplemental disclosures of cash flows information:         
     Cash paid during the year for:
        Income taxes, net of refunds                         $  1,981   $  1,255    $  5,956    $  6,931   $  8,154
                                                             ========   ========    ========    ========   ========

        Interest                                             $  7,066   $  9,435    $ 32,476    $ 45,061   $ 55,160
                                                             ========   ========    ========    ========   ========

Supplemental disclosure of non-cash transactions
     Purchase of minority shares of West Essex               $      -   $ 17,336    $ 17,336    $      -   $      -
                                                             ========   ========    ========    ========   ========
     Goodwill - West Essex acquisition                       $      -   $ 50,517    $ 50,517    $      -   $      -
                                                             ========   ========    ========    ========   ========
     Deposit for acquisition of West Essex Bancorp, Inc.     $      -   $(67,853)   $(67,853)   $      -   $      -
                                                             ========   ========    ========    ========   ========



See notes to consolidated financial statements.

                                      F-6


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------

1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
-----------------------------------------------

         Basis of financial statement presentation
         -----------------------------------------

         The  consolidated  financial  statements  include  the  accounts of the
         Company, its wholly owned subsidiary,  Kearny Federal Savings Bank (the
         "Bank"),  and the  Bank's  wholly  owned  subsidiaries,  KFS  Financial
         Services,  Inc. and West Essex Insurance Agency, and have been prepared
         in conformity  with  accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the
         United States of America.  All  significant  intercompany  accounts and
         transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

         In preparing  the  consolidated  financial  statements,  management  is
         required to make  estimates  and  assumptions  that affect the reported
         amounts of assets and  liabilities as of the dates of the  consolidated
         statements  of  financial  condition  and revenues and expenses for the
         periods then ended.  Actual  results  could differ  significantly  from
         those estimates.  A material estimate that is particularly  susceptible
         to significant change relates to the determination of the allowance for
         loan losses.  Management  believes  that the  allowance for loan losses
         represents  its best  estimate of losses known and inherent in the loan
         portfolio  that are both  probable and  reasonable  to estimate.  While
         management  uses available  information  to recognize  losses on loans,
         future  additions  to the  allowance  for loan losses may be  necessary
         based on changes in economic conditions in the market area.

         The Company's unaudited interim  consolidated  financial statements are
         subject to possible  adjustment in connection  with the annual audit of
         the  consolidated  financial  statements  as of and for the year ending
         June 30, 2005. In the opinion of management, the accompanying unaudited
         interim  consolidated  financial  statements  reflect  all  adjustments
         (consisting  of  normal  recurring  adjustments)  necessary  for a fair
         presentation  of financial  position and results of operations  for the
         periods presented.  Operations for the three months ended September 30,
         2004,  are not  necessary  indicative of the results to be expected for
         the full year.

         In addition,  various regulatory agencies, as an integral part of their
         examination process,  periodically review the Bank's allowance for loan
         losses.  Such agencies may require the  recognition of additions to the
         allowance based on their judgments about information  available to them
         at the time of their examination.

         Cash and cash equivalents
         -------------------------

         Cash and cash equivalents  include cash and amounts due from depository
         institution,  interest-bearing  deposits  in  other  banks,  securities
         purchased under agreements to resell,  and federal funds sold, all with
         original maturities of three months or less.

         Securities purchased under agreements to resell
         -----------------------------------------------

         Securities  purchased  under  agreements to resell are accounted for as
         collateralized financial transactions and are carried at the amounts at
         which  the  securities  will  be  subsequently  reacquired.  Securities
         purchased under agreements to resell are required to be held by a third
         party  custodian.  The  market  values of  securities  to be resold are
         monitored on a daily basis and  additional  collateral  may be obtained
         where considered necessary to protect against credit exposure.

                                      F - 7


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Cont'd.)
-------------------------------------------------------

         Securities
         ----------

         Investments in debt securities that the  Company/Bank  has the positive
         intent   and   ability  to  hold  to   maturity   are   classified   as
         held-to-maturity  securities and reported at amortized  cost.  Debt and
         equity  securities that are bought and held principally for the purpose
         of selling them in the near term are  classified as trading  securities
         and reported at fair value,  with  unrealized  holding gains and losses
         included in earnings.  Debt and equity  securities  not  classified  as
         trading securities nor as held-to-maturity securities are classified as
         available  for  sale  securities  and  reported  at  fair  value,  with
         unrealized  holding  gains or losses,  net of  deferred  income  taxes,
         reported in the accumulated  other  comprehensive  income  component of
         stockholder's equity.

         The Company  adopted  Emerging  Issues Tax Force ("EITF")  Issuance No.
         03-1,  The  Meaning  of  Other  than   Temporary   Impairment  and  Its
         Application  to Certain  Investments,  as of June 30,  2004.  EITF 03-1
         includes  certain  disclosures  regarding  quantitative and qualitative
         disclosures for securities accounted for under the Financial Accounting
         Standards Board's ("FASB") Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards
         ("SFAS") No. 115, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity
         Securities,  that are impaired at the balance sheet date, but for which
         other-than-temporary   impairment   has  not   been   recognized.   The
         disclosures  under EITF 03-1 are  required for  consolidated  financial
         statements for years ending after December 15, 2003 and are included in
         these consolidated financial statements.

         Under EITF 03-1,  individual  securities are  considered  impaired when
         fair  value is less than  amortized  cost.  Management  evaluates  on a
         monthly  basis  whether  any  securities   are   other-than-temporarily
         impaired.  In making this  determination,  we  consider  the extent and
         duration for the  impairment,  the nature and  financial  health of the
         issuer,  other  factors  relevant  to  specific  securities,   and  the
         Company's  ability and intent to hold  securities  for a period of time
         sufficient to allow for any anticipated  recovery in market value. If a
         security  is  determined  to  be  other-than-temporarily  impaired,  an
         impairment loss is charged to operations.

         Premiums and  discounts on all  securities  are  amortized/accreted  to
         maturity  by use of the  level-yield  method.  Gain or loss on sales of
         securities is based on the specific identification method.

         Concentration of risk
         ---------------------

         The Bank's lending  activity is  concentrated  in loans secured by real
         estate located primarily in the State of New Jersey.

         Loans receivable
         ----------------

         Loans  receivable  are  stated at unpaid  principal  balances  plus net
         deferred loan  origination  costs and discounts  less the allowance for
         loan losses.  Loan origination fees and certain direct loan origination
         costs are deferred and amortized,  using the level-yield  method, as an
         adjustment of yield over the  contractual  lives of the related  loans.
         Unearned  discounts are accreted by use of the level-yield  method over
         the contractual lives of the related loans.

                                      F - 8


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Cont'd.)
-------------------------------------------------------

         Loans receivable (Cont'd.)
         --------------------------

         Recognition of interest by the accrual method is generally discontinued
         when interest or principal  payments are ninety days or more in arrears
         on a  contractual  basis,  or when  other  factors  indicate  that  the
         collection of such amounts is doubtful. At the time a loan is placed on
         nonaccrual status, an allowance for uncollected interest is recorded in
         the current period for  previously  accrued and  uncollected  interest.
         Interest on such loans,  if  appropriate,  is recognized as income when
         payments  are  received.  A loan is  returned  to accrual  status  when
         interest or  principal  payments  are no longer  ninety days or more in
         arrears  on  a  contractual  basis  and  factors  indicating   doubtful
         collectibilty no longer exist.

         Allowance for loan losses
         -------------------------

         An allowance for loan losses is  maintained at a level that  represents
         management's  best  estimate of losses  known and  inherent in the loan
         portfolio  that are both  probable  and  reasonable  to  estimate.  The
         allowance  is decreased by loan  charge-offs,  increased by  subsequent
         recoveries  of loans  previously  charged off, and then  adjusted,  via
         either a charge or credit to  operations,  to an amount  determined  by
         management to be necessary.  Loans or portions thereof, are charged off
         when, after collection efforts are exhausted, they are determined to be
         uncollectible. Management of the Bank, in determining the allowance for
         loan losses,  considers the losses  inherent in its loan  portfolio and
         changes in the nature and volume inherent in its loan activities, along
         with the general economic and real estate market  conditions.  The Bank
         utilizes a two tier approach:  (1) identification of impaired loans and
         establishment  of  specific  loss  allowances  on such  loans;  and (2)
         establishment of general  valuation  allowances on the remainder of its
         loan  portfolio.  The Bank  maintains a loan review system which allows
         for  a   periodic   review  of  its  loan   portfolio   and  the  early
         identification  of  potential  impaired  loans.  Such system takes into
         consideration,  among other things,  delinquency status, size of loans,
         type of collateral and financial  condition of the borrowers.  Specific
         loan loss allowances are  established  for identified  loans based on a
         review  of  such  information   and/or  appraisals  of  the  underlying
         collateral. General loan losses are based upon a combination of factors
         including, but not limited to, actual loan loss experience, composition
         of the loan portfolio,  current  economic  conditions and  management's
         judgment.  Although  management believes that specific and general loan
         losses are established in accordance with  management's  best estimate,
         actual  losses are dependent  upon future events and, as such,  further
         additions to the level of loan loss allowances may be necessary.

         A loan evaluated for impairment is deemed to be impaired when, based on
         current  information  and events,  it is probable that the Bank will be
         unable to collect all amounts due according to the contractual terms of
         the loan  agreement.  All loans  identified  as impaired are  evaluated
         independently.  The Bank does not aggregate  such loans for  evaluation
         purposes.  Payments  received  on impaired  loans are applied  first to
         interest receivable and then to principal.

                                      F - 9


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Cont'd.)
-------------------------------------------------------

         Premises and equipment
         ----------------------

         Land is carried at cost.  Buildings and  improvements,  furnishings and
         equipment  and  leasehold   improvements  are  carried  at  cost,  less
         accumulated depreciation and amortization computed on the straight-line
         method over the following estimated useful lives:

             Buildings and improvements     10 to 50 years
             Furnishings and equipment        4 to 20 years
             Leasehold improvements         Shorter of useful lives or 10 years

         Construction  in  progress   primarily   represents   facilities  under
         construction for future use in the Company's  business and includes all
         costs to acquire land and construct  buildings,  as well as capitalized
         interest during the construction period. Interest is capitalized at the
         Bank's average cost of interest-bearing liabilities.

         Significant  renewals and  betterments  are charged to the property and
         equipment account. Maintenance and repairs are charged to operations in
         the year incurred.  Rental income is netted against  occupancy costs in
         the consolidated statements of income.

         Goodwill and other intangible assets
         ------------------------------------

         Goodwill and other intangible assets  principally  represent the excess
         cost over the fair value of the net assets of the institutions acquired
         in purchase transactions. Through June 30, 2002, goodwill was amortized
         using the  straight  line  method over 15 years.  The Company  adopted,
         effective July 1, 2002, SFAS No. 141, "Business  Combinations" and SFAS
         No. 142, "Goodwill and Other Intangible  Assets",  under which goodwill
         is no longer amortized,  but subject to an impairment test. Goodwill is
         evaluated annually by reporting unit and an impairment loss recorded if
         indicated.  The impairment  test is performed in two phases.  The first
         step of the  goodwill  impairment  test  compares the fair value of the
         reporting unit with its carrying  amount,  including  goodwill.  If the
         fair value of the reporting unit exceeds its carrying amount,  goodwill
         of the reporting  unit is  considered  not  impaired;  however,  if the
         carrying  amount of the  reporting  unit  exceeds  its fair  value,  an
         additional  procedure  must be  performed.  That  additional  procedure
         compares the implied fair value of the  reporting  unit's  goodwill (as
         defined in SFAS No. 142), with the carrying amount of that goodwill. An
         impairment  loss is recorded to the extent that the carrying  amount of
         goodwill exceeds its implied fair value.  Fair value is determined by a
         combination of the  Comparable  Transaction  and  Discounted  Cash Flow
         approaches.  No impairment  charges were required to be recorded in the
         years  ended June 30,  2004,  2003 or 2002.  If an  impairment  loss is
         determined  to exist in the future,  such loss will be  reflected as an
         expense in the consolidated statements of income in the period in which
         the  impairment  loss  is  determined.   Separate   intangible  assets,
         including  core  deposit  intangibles  that  are  not  deemed  to  have
         indefinite  lives,  continue to be amortized  over their useful  lives,
         which is estimated to be ten years.

                                     F - 10


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


1. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Cont'd.)
--   ------------------------------------------  ---------

         Income taxes
         ------------

         The Company and its subsidiaries file  consolidated  federal income tax
         returns. Income taxes are allocated based on the contribution of income
         to the  consolidated  income tax  returns.  Separate  state  income tax
         returns are filed.

         Federal and state income  taxes have been  provided on the basis of the
         reported  income.  The amounts  reflected on the  Company's tax returns
         differ from these  provisions due principally to temporary  differences
         in the reporting of certain  items for  financial  reporting and income
         tax reporting purposes. Deferred income taxes are recorded to recognize
         such temporary differences.

         Stock-based compensation plans
         ------------------------------

         Entities acquired by Company had granted stock options to employees and
         outside directors.  See note 13 for additional information as to option
         grants.  The options  granted were  accounted  for using the  intrinsic
         value method,  in accordance with Accounting  Principles  Board Opinion
         No.  25,  "Accounting  for Stock  Issued  to  Employees",  and  related
         interpretations.  No  compensation  expense has been  reflected  in net
         income for the options granted as all such grants had an exercise price
         equal to the market price of the underlying stock at the date of grant.
         The following table provides  information as to net income and earnings
         per share as if the fair value  recognition  provisions of Statement of
         Financial  Accounting  Standards No 123,  "Accounting  for  Stock-Based
         Compensation", as amended, had been applied to all option grants.



                                                                    Year Ended June 30,
                                                            ---------------------------------------
                                                                2004         2003          2002
                                                                ----         ----          ----
                                                       (In Thousands, Except for Per Share Amounts)

                                                                                 
Net income as reported                                     $   12,897   $   4,055    $   16,490

Remove:     Total stock-based compensation expense,
            net of income taxes, included in reported
            net income                                              -           -             -

Include:                                                                             
            Total stock-based compensation expense,
            net of income taxes, that would have been
            included in the determination of net income
            if the fair value method had been applied to
            all grants                                              -        (155)         (139)
                                                           ----------   ---------    ----------
Pro forma net income                                       $   12,897   $   3,900    $   16,351
                                                           ==========   =========    ==========

Basic net income per common share:
    As reported                                            $ 1,289.70   $  337.52    $ 1,294.02
    Pro forma                                                1,289.70      324.62      1,283.14
                                                           ==========   =========    ==========

Diluted net income per common share:
    As reported                                            $ 1,289.70   $  336.06    $ 1,287.13
    Pro forma                                                1,289.70      323.22      1,276.33
                                                           ==========   =========    ==========


During the three months ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 (unaudited), there was
no stock-based compensation included in reported net income nor would there have
been under the fair value method.

                                     F - 11


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


1.   SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Cont'd.)
-------------------------------------------------------

         Interest rate risk
         ------------------

         The Bank is principally  engaged in the business of attracting deposits
         from the general public and using these  deposits,  together with other
         funds, to purchase securities and to make loans secured by real estate.
         The  potential  for  interest-rate  risk  exists  as a  result  of  the
         generally shorter duration of  interest-sensitive  liabilities compared
         to the generally  longer duration of  interest-sensitive  assets.  In a
         rising rate  environment,  liabilities will reprice faster than assets,
         thereby  reducing net  interest  income.  For this  reason,  management
         regularly  monitors  the maturity  structure  of the Bank's  assets and
         liabilities in order to measure its level of interest-rate  risk and to
         plan for future volatility.

         Net income per common share
         ---------------------------

         Basic net income per common share is computed by dividing net income by
         the  weighted  average  number of shares of common  stock  outstanding.
         Diluted net income per common  share is computed by dividing net income
         by the weighted  average number of shares of common stock  outstanding,
         as adjusted to include the effects of  outstanding  stock  options,  if
         dilutive, using the treasury stock method.

         Net income per common share computations include the outstanding shares
         of common stock related to acquired  entities (see Note 2). Such shares
         have  been  converted  to  equivalent  Kearny  shares,  based  upon the
         relative  book  values  of each  entity at the  applicable  acquisition
         dates.

         Reclassification
         ----------------

         Certain  amounts as of and for the years  ended June 30, 2003 and 2002,
         have been reclassified to conform to the current year's presentation.


2.   BUSINESS COMBINATIONS
--------------------------

On January 10, 2002,  Kearny MHC, the Company and the Bank entered into a merger
agreement with Pulaski MHC,  Pulaski  Bancorp,  Inc.  ("Pulaski")  and Pulaski's
subsidiary,  Pulaski Savings Bank ("PSB"). On October 18, 2002, pursuant to this
merger agreement, (i) Pulaski MHC merged with Kearny MHC, with Kearny MHC as the
surviving entity; (ii) Pulaski merged with the Company,  with the Company as the
surviving entity;  (iii) PSB merged with and into the Bank, with the Bank as the
surviving  institution,  the Bank  remaining a subsidiary  of the Company;  (iv)
concurrently  with steps (i) through (iii),  100% of the  outstanding  shares of
Pulaski common stock were canceled,  with shares previously held by stockholders
other than Pulaski MHC exchanged for a payment of $32.90 per share cash; and (v)
as a result of the  foregoing,  the  interests of Pulaski MHC members  ceased to
exist and were  converted  into  interests of the same nature in Kearny MHC. The
amount  paid to  minority  shareholders  of Pulaski in excess of their  combined
interest in Pulaski amounted to $16,146,000, which was recorded as goodwill.

                                     F - 12



                    KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


2.   BUSINESS COMBINATIONS (Cont'd.)
----------------------------------

On  September  11,  2002,  Kearny MHC,  the Company and the Bank  entered into a
merger  agreement with West Essex  Bancorp,  M.H.C.,  West Essex  Bancorp,  Inc.
("West Essex") and West Essex's subsidiary, West Essex Savings Bank ("WESB"). On
July 1, 2003, pursuant to this merger agreement,  (i) West Essex MHC merged with
Kearny MHC, with Kearny MHC as the surviving entity; (ii) West Essex merged with
the Company,  with the Company as the surviving  entity;  (iii) WESB merged with
and  into  the  Bank,  with  the  Bank as the  surviving  institution,  the Bank
remaining a subsidiary of the Company;  (iv) concurrently with steps (i) through
(iii), 100% of the outstanding  shares of West Essex common stock were canceled,
with  shares  previously  held by  stockholders  other than West Essex  Bancorp,
M.H.C.  exchanged for a payment of $35.10 per share cash; and (v) as a result of
the  foregoing,  the interests of West Essex Bancorp,  M.H.C.  members ceased to
exist and were  converted  into  interests of the same nature in Kearny MHC. The
amount paid to minority  shareholders  of West Essex in excess of their combined
interest in West Essex amounted to $50,517,000, which was recorded as goodwill.

Both of the above noted  transactions  were  accounted  for as follows:  (i) the
merger of the mutual holding companies utilized the pooling-of-interests  method
accounting,  (ii)  the  acquisition  of the  mid-tier  stock  holding  company's
minority  shareholder   interests  was  accounted  for  as  the  acquisition  of
non-controlling minority interests, and (iii) the merger of the mid-tier holding
companies was accounted for as a combination of entities  under common  control.
In addition,  Emerging Issues Task Force Topic No. D-97, "Push-Down Accounting",
was applied to the applicable entities.

For the purpose of comparability,  in presenting share and per share information
for periods preceding the merger dates, issued and outstanding shares of Pulaski
and West Essex were  converted to Company  shares on the basis of relative  book
value per share. Accordingly, Pulaski shares were converted at a rate of 1 share
of Company  common stock for every 1,797 shares of Pulaski common stock and West
Essex  shares were  converted  at a rate of 1 share of Company  common stock for
every 2,816 shares of West Essex common stock.

Merger related expenses include the following (in thousands):



                                                              Three Months Ended
                                                                 September 30,              Year Ended June 30,
                                                          ----------------------------  -----------------------------------
                                                              2004           2003           2004           2003       2002
                                                              ----           ----           ----           ----       ----
                                                           (Unaudited)

                                                                                                       
     Legal, professional, filing fees and other expenses   $     -          $ 592          $ 592        $ 2,670       $ 619
     Payments for terminated employment contracts and
       stock based compensation plans for officers               -              -              -         10,657           -
     Stock option payout to directors                            -              -              -          1,594           -
                                                           -------          -----          -----       --------       -----
                                                           $     -          $ 592          $ 592       $ 14,921       $ 619
                                                           =======          =====          =====        =======       =====


                                     F - 13



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



3.   SECURITIES PURCHASED UNDER AGREEMENTS TO RESELL
----------------------------------------------------


                                                                   June 30,
                                   Interest    September 30,  ------------------
  Purchased From       Maturity      Rate    2004 (Unaudited)   2004      2003
------------------  -------------  -------   ---------------- --------  --------
                                                                 (In Thousands)

Paine Webber, Inc.   July 2, 2003   1.375%       $      -     $      -  $200,000
                                                 ========     ========  ========


At June 30, 2003,  the Bank  purchased  Federal  National  Mortgage  Association
mortgage-backed securities, under agreements to resell, having a market value of
approximately $204,000,000.

4.   SECURITIES AVAILABLE FOR SALE
----------------------------------

                                           September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)
                              ------------------------------------------------
                                              Gross Unrealized
                              Amortized    -----------------------   Carrying
                                Cost         Gains        Losses       Value
                              ---------    ---------   -----------   ---------
                                                (In Thousands)
Common stock                    $   246    $16,135      $     -       $16,381
Mutual funds                     13,976        146           97        14,025
Trust preferred securities       
  due after ten years            10,887        231          189        10,929
                                -------    -------      -------       -------
                                $25,109    $16,512      $   286       $41,335
                                =======    =======      =======       =======


                                               June 30, 2004
                              ------------------------------------------------
                                              Gross Unrealized
                              Amortized    -----------------------   Carrying
                                Cost         Gains        Losses       Value
                              ---------    ---------   -----------   ---------
                                                (In Thousands)
Common stock                    $   246    $15,648      $     -       $15,894
Mutual funds                     13,933         63           97        13,899
Trust preferred securities       
  due after ten years            11,929         69          227        11,771
                                -------    -------      -------       -------
                                $26,108    $15,780      $   324       $41,564
                                =======    =======      =======       =======


                                     F - 14

4. SECURITIES AVAILABLE FOR SALE (Cont'd.)
--   ---------------------------------------


                                               June 30, 2003
                              ------------------------------------------------
                                              Gross Unrealized
                              Amortized    -----------------------   Carrying
                                Cost         Gains        Losses       Value
                              ---------    ---------   -----------   ---------
                                                (In Thousands)
Common stock                    $   246    $12,502      $     -       $12,748
Mutual funds                     13,781        427           12        14,196
Trust preferred securities       
  due after ten years            11,927        245        1,276        10,896
                                -------    -------      -------       -------
                                $25,954    $13,174      $ 1,288       $37,840
                                =======    =======      =======       =======

The age of unrealized losses and fair value of related securities  available for
sale were as follows (in thousands):



                                     Less Than 12 Months         12 Months or More                Total
                               ----------------------------- --------------------------    ----------------------
                                                 Unrealized                 Unrealized                 Unrealized 
                                 Fair Value        Losses     Fair Value      Losses       Fair Value    Losses
                               ------------  --------------- ------------  ------------    ----------- ----------
                                                                                       
                                                                                          
September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)                                                             
Common stock                    $      -          $      -     $      -    $     -         $      -    $     -
Mutual funds                           -                 -        7,197         97            7,197         97
Trust preferred stock                  -                 -        7,617        189            7,617        189
                                --------          --------     --------    -------         --------    -------
Total                           $                 $              14,814        286           14,814        286
                                ========          ========     ========    =======         ========    =======
                                                                                           
                                                                                           
June 30, 2004                                                                              
Common stock                    $      -          $      -     $      -    $     -         $      -    $     -
Mutual funds                           -                 -        7,057         97            7,057         97
Trust preferred stock                  -                 -        7,577        227            7,577        227
                                --------          --------     --------    -------         --------    -------
Total                           $      -          $      -     $ 14,634    $   324         $ 14,634    $   324
                                ========          ========     ========    =======         ========    =======

                                      

As of September 30, 2004 (unaudited) and June 30, 2004, management has concluded
that the  unrealized  losses are  temporary in nature  since they are  primarily
related  to market  interest  rates and not  related  to the  underlying  credit
quality of the  issuer of the  securities.  Additionally,  the  Company  has the
intent and ability to hold these investments for a time necessary to recover the
amortized cost.

During the three months ended  September  30, 2004  (unaudited),  proceeds  from
sales of securities available for sale totalled $1,115,000 and resulted in gross
gains of $71,000.  There were no sales of  securities  available for sale during
the three months ended  September 30, 2003  (unaudited) and the years ended June
30, 2004, 2003 and 2002.

                                     F - 15


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



5.   INVESTMENT SECURITIES HELD TO MATURITY
-------------------------------------------




                                                           September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)
                                                    -------------------------------------------
                                                                Gross Unrealized
                                                    Carrying  --------------------   Estimated
                                                     Value      Gains      Losses    Fair Value
                                                    --------- --------- -----------  ----------
                                                                   (In Thousands)
                                                                            
Government agencies:
      After one year but within five years          $256,262   $     73   $  2,008   $254,327
      After five years but within ten years              494        115          -        609
      After ten years                                 16,594          3        115     16,482
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                     273,350        191      2,123    271,418
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
Obligations of states and political subdivisions:
      Within one year                                  4,481         62          -      4,543
      After one year but within five years            15,822        413          -     16,235
      After five years but within ten years           75,364      2,249        174     77,439
      After ten years                                 76,752      1,481        366     77,867
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                     172,419      4,205        540    176,084
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                    $445,769   $  4,396   $  2,663   $447,502
                                                    ========   ========   ========   ========






                                                                  June 30, 2004
                                                    -------------------------------------------
                                                                Gross Unrealized
                                                    Carrying  --------------------   Estimated
                                                     Value      Gains      Losses    Fair Value
                                                    --------- --------- -----------  ----------
                                                                   (In Thousands)
                                                                            
Government agencies:
      After one year but within five years          $246,259   $      -   $  5,223   $241,036
      After five years but within ten years           10,493        117         62     10,548
      After ten years                                 17,649         11        104     17,556
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                     274,401        128      5,389    269,140
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
Obligations of states and political subdivisions:
      Within one year                                  5,386         33          -      5,419
      After one year but within five years            13,606        369         54     13,921
      After five years but within ten years           65,990        922        991     65,921
      After ten years                                 76,487        394      2,507     74,374
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                     161,469      1,718      3,552    159,635
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                    $435,870   $  1,846   $  8,941   $428,775
                                                    ========   ========   ========   ========



                                      F-16


                                      KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                    NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                    ------------------------------------------


5.   INVESTMENT SECURITIES HELD TO MATURITY (Cont'd.)
---------------------------------------------------



                                                                  June 30, 2004
                                                    -------------------------------------------
                                                                Gross Unrealized
                                                    Carrying  --------------------   Estimated
                                                     Value      Gains      Losses    Fair Value
                                                    --------- --------- -----------  ----------
                                                                   (In Thousands)
                                                                            

Government agencies:
      After one year but within five years          $120,369   $  1,276   $      -   $121,645
      After five years but within ten years           25,493        257          -     25,750
      After ten years                                 24,106        142        130     24,118
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                     169,968      1,675        130    171,513
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
Obligations of states and political subdivisions:
      Within one year                                  8,217        109          -      8,326
      After one year but within five years            21,807        834          -     22,641
      After five years but within ten years           24,074      1,271          -     25,345
      After ten years                                 63,255      2,639        141     65,753
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                     117,353      4,853        141    122,065
                                                    --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                    $287,321   $  6,528   $    271   $293,578
                                                    ========   ========   ========   ========


There were no sales of investment  securities  held to maturity during the three
months ended  September 30, 2004 and 2003  (unaudited)  and the years ended June
30, 2004,  2003 and 2002.  During the three months ended  September 30, 2004 and
2003 (unaudited) and the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002, proceeds from
calls of securities totalled $ -0-, $18,159,000, $103,810,000,  $108,705,000 and
$107,082,000,  respectively,  resulting in no gains or losses. At June 30, 2004,
investment securities held to maturity with a carrying value of $256,752,000 are
callable within one year.

At September 30, 2004  (unaudited)  and June 30, 2004, all obligations of states
and  political  subdivisions  were  guaranteed by insurance  policies  issued by
various insurance companies.

The age of  unrealized  losses and fair value of related  investment  securities
held to maturity were as follows (in thousands):




                                   Less Than 12 Months        12 Months or More               Total
                                -------------------------  ------------------------  -----------------------
                                              Unrealized                Unrealized                Unrealized 
                                 Fair Value     Losses     Fair Value    Losses      Fair Value    Losses
                                 ----------     ------     ----------    ------      ----------    ------
                                                                                   
September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)                                                                    
Government agencies:             $140,828     $  1,150     $ 92,480     $    973     $233,308     $  2,123
Obligations of states and                                                                         
    political subdivisions:        21,270          186       13,839          354       35,109          540
                                 --------     --------     --------     --------     --------     --------  
Total                            $162,098     $  1,336     $106,319     $  1,327     $268,417     $  2,663
                                 ========     ========     ========     ========     ========     ========
                                                                                                  
                                                                                                  
June 30, 2004                                                                                     
Government agencies:             $250,973     $  5,285     $ 16,386     $    104     $267,359     $  5,389  
Obligations of states and                                                                         
    political subdivisions:        85,620        3,026        7,365          526       92,985        3,552
                                 --------     --------     --------     --------     --------     --------  
Total                            $336,593     $  8,311     $ 23,751     $    630     $360,344     $  8,941  
                                 ========     ========     ========     ========     ========     ========  

                               
                                       
                                      F-17



                                      KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                    NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                    ------------------------------------------



5. INVESTMENT SECURITIES HELD TO MATURITY (Cont'd.)
--   --------------------------------------  ---------

As of September 30, 2004 (unaudited) and June 30, 2004, management has concluded
that the  unrealized  losses are  temporary in nature  since they are  primarily
related  to market  interest  rates and not  related  to the  underlying  credit
quality of the  issuers of the  securities.  Additionally,  the  Company has the
intent and ability to hold these  investments  for the time necessary to recover
the amortized cost.


6.   LOANS RECEIVABLE
---------------------

                                                                 June 30,
                                             September 30, --------------------
                                          2004 (Unaudited)  2004         2003
                                          ---------------  --------     --------
                                                        (In Thousands)

Real estate mortgage                          $453,828     $441,667     $437,490
                                              --------     --------     --------

Commercial business                              3,877        5,161        2,353
                                              --------     --------     --------

Consumer:
      Home equity loans                         38,494       37,381       37,315
      Home equity lines of credit               15,615       15,677       19,905
      Passbook or certificate                    2,667        2,746        2,895
      Other                                        319          336        1,273
                                              --------     --------     --------
                                                57,095       56,140       61,388
                                              --------     --------     --------
Construction                                     4,881        7,212       11,183
                                              --------     --------     --------
          Total loans                          519,681      510,180      512,414

Deferred loan costs and fees, net                  805          758        1,927
                                              --------     --------     --------
                                              $520,486     $510,938     $514,341
                                              ========     ========     ========


At  September  30,  2004  (unaudited)  and June 30,  2004 and 2003,  real estate
mortgage   loans   included   $370,883,000,   $358,241,000   and   $366,391,000,
respectively, of loans secured by one-to-four-family residential properties.

The  Bank  has  granted  loans  to its  officers  and  directors  and  to  their
associates.  Related  party  loans  are made on  substantially  the same  terms,
including  interest rates and  collateral,  as those  prevailing at the time for
comparable  transactions  with  unrelated  persons and do not involve  more than
normal risk of collectibility. As of September 30, 2004 (unaudited) and June 30,
2004 and 2003,  such loans  totalled  approximately  $1,608,000,  $1,633,000 and
$2,507,000,  respectively.  During the three  months  ended  September  30, 2004
(unaudited), new loans to related parties totalled $ -0- and repayments totalled
$25,000.  During  the year  ended June 30,  2004,  new loans to related  parties
totalled  $-0-,  repayments  totalled   approximately   $100,000  and  loans  to
individuals no longer associated with the Bank totalled approximately $774,000.

                                     F - 18


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



6.   LOANS RECEIVABLE (Cont'd.)
-----------------------------

The activity in the allowance for loan losses is as follows (in thousands):



                                                            Three Months Ended
                                     September 30,          Year Ended June 30,
                                   ------------------  -----------------------------
                                     2004      2003       2004       2003      2002
                                   -------    -------   -------    -------   -------
                                      (Unaudited)

                                                                
Balance - beginning                $ 5,144    $ 5,180   $ 5,180    $ 5,170   $ 5,167
Provisions charged to operations       151          -         -          -         3
Loans charged off                       (5)         -       (36)         -         -
Loans recovered                          -          -         -         10         -
                                   -------    -------   -------    -------   -------
Balance - ending                   $ 5,290    $ 5,180   $ 5,144    $ 5,180   $ 5,170
                                   =======    =======   =======    =======   =======


At September 30, 2004  (unaudited) and June 30, 2004 and 2003,  nonaccrual loans
for which the accrual of interest had been discontinued  totalled  approximately
$2,453,000,  $2,289,000  and  $2,370,000,  respectively.  Had these  loans  been
performing  in  accordance  with  their  original  terms,  the  interest  income
recognized  for the three months ended  September 30, 2004 and 2003  (unaudited)
and the years  ended  June 30,  2004,  2003 and 2002,  would have been $ 44,000,
$50,000  ,  $177,000,  $178,000  and  $197,000,  respectively.  Interest  income
recognized on such loans was $8,000, $30,000,  $118,000,  $102,000 and $170,000,
respectively.

Impaired  loans and related  amounts  recorded in allowance  for loan losses are
summarized as follows (in thousands):

                                                                 June 30,
                                              September 30,  -------------------
                                                  2004        2004         2003
                                                  ----        ----         ----
                                               (Unaudited)

   Recorded investment in impaired loans
     with recorded allowance                     $ 255       $ 256         $ 229

   Without recorded allowance                        -           -             -
                                                 -----       -----         -----

              Total impaired loans                 255         256           229

   Related allowance for loan losses               115         115           115
                                                 -----       -----         -----
   Net impaired loans                            $ 140       $ 141         $ 114
                                                 =====       =====         =====


The interest  income  received and  recognized  for these loans during the three
months ended September 30, 2004  (unaudited) was $5,000.  No interest income was
received and recognized for these loans during the three months ended  September
30, 2003  (unaudited)  and the years  ended June 30,  2004,  2003 and 2002.  The
average  balance of impaired  loans during the three months ended  September 30,
2004 and 2003  (unaudited)  and the years  ended  June 30,  2004,  2003 and 2002
approximated $256,000, $229,000, $243,000, $229,000 and $115,000, respectively.

                                     F - 19


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



7.   MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES HELD TO MATURITY
------------------------------------------------



                                                September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)
                                          -------------------------------------------
                                                        Gross Unrealized   Estimated
                                          Carrying    ------------------   ----------
                                            Value      Gains      Losses   Fair Value
                                           --------   --------   -------   ----------
                                                         (In Thousands)

                                                                   
Government National Mortgage Association   $ 84,995   $  2,612   $    231   $ 87,376
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation      294,451      3,829      1,472    296,808
Federal National Mortgage Association       345,430      6,208        891    350,747
                                           --------   --------   --------   --------
                                           $724,876   $ 12,649   $  2,594   $734,931
                                           ========   ========   ========   ========





                                                          June 30, 2004
                                          -------------------------------------------
                                                        Gross Unrealized   Estimated
                                          Carrying    ------------------   ----------
                                            Value      Gains      Losses   Fair Value
                                           --------   --------   -------   ----------
                                                         (In Thousands)

                                                                   
Government National Mortgage Association   $ 94,499   $  2,507   $  1,487   $ 95,519
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation      314,221      2,472      3,505    313,188
Federal National Mortgage Association       362,633      4,670      3,300    364,003
                                           --------   --------   --------   --------
                                           $771,353   $  9,649   $  8,292   $772,710
                                           ========   ========   ========   ========




                                                                June 30, 2003
                                                -------------------------------------------
                                                              Gross Unrealized   Estimated
                                                Carrying    ------------------   ----------
                                                  Value      Gains      Losses   Fair Value
                                                 --------   --------   -------   ----------
                                                               (In Thousands)
                                      
                                                                   
Government National Mortgage Association         $150,699   $  6,433   $     62   $157,070
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation            197,962      6,337        125    204,174
Federal National Mortgage Association             331,061     10,828        195    341,694
Collateral mortgage obligations - corporations      1,894         39          -      1,933
Other - mortgage-backed security                        3          -          -          3
                                                 --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                 $681,619   $ 23,637   $    382   $704,874
                                                 ========   ========   ========   ========


Net premiums of approximately $3,302,000 (unaudited),  $3,565,000 and $3,705,000
at September 30, 2004, and June 30, 2004 and 2003, respectively, are included in
the carrying amounts of mortgage-backed securities held to maturity.

There were no sales of  mortgage-backed  securities  held to maturity during the
three months ended  September 30, 2004 and 2003  (unaudited) and the years ended
June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002. At September 30, 2004  (unaudited) and at June 30,
2004  and  2003,  securities  with  carrying  value of  approximately  $822,000,
$906,000 and  $430,000,  respectively,  were  pledged to secure  public funds on
deposit.

                                     F - 20


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


7.   MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES HELD TO MATURITY (Cont'd.)
--------------------------------------------------------


The  age  of  unrealized  losses  and  fair  value  of  related  mortgage-backed
securities held to maturity were as follows (in thousands):



                                        Less Than 12 Months     12 Months or More              Total
                                   ------------------------  ------------------------  ------------------------
                                                 Unrealized                Unrealized               Unrealized
                                   Fair Value      Losses    Fair Value      Losses    Fair Value      Losses
                                   ----------      ------    ----------      ------    ----------      ------
                                                                                       
September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)                                                        
Mortgage-backed                                                                       
   Securities                       $207,984      $ 1,870      $55,566       $ 724      $263,550       $ 2,594
                                    ========      =======      =======       =====      ========       =======
                                                                                      
June 30, 2004                                                                         
Mortgage-backed                                                                       
   Securities                       $376,245      $ 7,977      $ 4,126       $ 315      $380,371       $ 8,292  
                                    ========      =======      =======       =====      ========       =======  
                                   
                                    
As of September 30, 2004 (unaudited) and June 30, 2004, management has concluded
that the  unrealized  losses are  temporary in nature  since they are  primarily
related  to market  interest  rates and not  related  to the  underlying  credit
quality of the  issuers of the  securities.  Additionally,  the  Company has the
intent and ability to hold these  investments  for the time necessary to recover
the amortized cost.



8.   PREMISES AND EQUIPMENT
---------------------------



                                                                      June 30,
                                                 September 30,    ------------------
                                                2004 (Unaudited)    2004      2003
                                                ---------------    -------   -------
                                                           (In Thousands)

                                                                      
Land                                                 $ 5,689       $ 5,689   $ 5,127
Buildings and improvements                            15,839        15,800    15,672
Leasehold improvements                                   422           422       399
Furnishings and equipment                              7,807         7,203     5,788
Construction in progress                               9,292         7,902     1,999
                                                     -------       -------   -------
                                                      39,049        37,016    28,985

Less accumulated depreciation and amortization        10,665        10,367     9,101
                                                     -------       -------   -------
                                                     $28,384       $26,649   $19,884
                                                     =======       =======   =======

                                                                 
                                                             
                                     F - 21

                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


9.   INTEREST RECEIVABLE
------------------------

                                                                 June 30,
                                            September 30,    -------------------
                                           2004 (Unaudited)   2004         2003
                                           ---------------   ------       ------
                                                       (In Thousands)

Loans                                           $2,226       $2,116       $2,396
Mortgage-backed securities                       3,265        3,514        3,507
Investments                                      3,370        4,231        2,569
Other interest-earning assets                        -            -            7
                                                ------       ------       ------
                                                $8,861       $9,861       $8,479
                                                ======       ======       ======


10.  GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS
-----------------------------------------

Net assets of an institution acquired in a purchase transaction prior to July 1,
2001, were recorded at fair value at the date of acquisition.  The Bank also has
finite-lived  intangible assets, which are included in other assets, in the form
of core  deposit  intangibles.  These  intangibles  are being  amortized  on the
straight line basis over their estimated useful lives of ten years.



                                                                    Core Deposit
                                                          Goodwill  Intangibles
                                                          --------  ------------
                                                              (In Thousands)

Balance at July 1, 2001                                   $ 17,911     $  4,108
Amortization                                                (2,311)        (636)
                                                          --------     --------

Balance at June 30, 2002                                    15,600        3,472
Pulaski Savings Bank acquisition (see note 2)               16,146            -
Amortization                                                     -         (636)
                                                          --------     --------

Balance at June 30, 2003                                    31,746        2,836
Amortization                                                     -         (636)

West Essex Savings Bank acquisition (see note 2)            50,517            -
                                                          --------     --------

Balance at June 30, 2004                                    82,263        2,200

Amortization (unaudited)                                      --           (159)
                                                          --------     --------

Balance at September 30, 2004 (unaudited)                 $ 82,263     $  2,041
                                                          ========     ========

The  gross  carrying  amount  of core  deposit  intangibles  was  $5,987,000  at
September  30,  2004  (unaudited)  and at both  June 30,  2004 and  2003,  while
accumulated   amortization  totalled  $3,310,000  (unaudited),   $3,151,000  and
$3,787,000  at September  30, 2004 and at June 30, 2004 and 2003,  respectively.
Amortization  is expected to total $636,000 in each of the years ending June 30,
2005, 2006 and 2007, and $292,000 in the year ending June 30, 2008.


                                     F - 22


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



11.   DEPOSITS
--------------



                                                                                            June 30,
                                                September 30,              ------------------------------------------------
                                                2004 (Unaudited)                 2004                      2003
                                         --------------------------------  -------------------  ---------------------------
                                                         Weighted                    Weighted                    Weighted
                                                          Average                     Average                     Average
                                             Amount        Rate          Amount        Rate          Amount        Rate
                                         ------------  -----------  -------------  -----------  -------------  ------------
                                                                        (In Thousands)

                                                                                                  
Non-interest-bearing demand              $    51,065       0.00%     $    55,377       0.00%     $    48,229       0.00%
Interest-bearing demand                      106,444       0.75%         103,648       0.75%          93,698       0.92%
Savings and club                             484,117       1.00%         481,466       1.00%         460,739       1.29%
Certificates of deposit                      869,184       2.11%         897,019       1.92%       1,011,018       2.72%
                                         -----------                 -----------                 -----------      
        Total deposits                   $ 1,510,810       1.59%     $ 1,537,510       1.48%     $ 1,613,684       2.13%
                                         ===========                 ===========                 ===========      



Certificates  of deposit with balances of $100,000 or more at September 30, 2004
(unaudited) and at June 30, 2004 and 2003, totalled approximately  $181,673,000,
$188,009,000 and $203,822,000,  respectively. Deposits in excess of $100,000 are
not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

A summary of certificates of deposit by maturity follows (in thousands):



                                                                June 30,
                                        September 30,   ------------------------
                                            2004            2004       2003
                                        -------------    ----------  -----------
                                       (Unaudited)

        One year or less                    $ 668,715     $ 709,940  $   814,875
        After one to two years                138,333       128,837      125,671
        After two to three years               37,306        31,624       46,376
        After three years                      24,830        26,618       24,096
                                            ---------     ---------  -----------
                                            $ 869,184     $ 897,019  $ 1,011,018
                                            =========     =========  ===========


Interest expense on deposits consists of the following (in thousands):




                                                          Three Months Ended
                                    September 30,         Year Ended June 30,
                                 ------------------   --------------------------
                                   2004      2003      2004      2003     2002
                                   ----      ----      ----      ----     ----
                                    (Unaudited)

Demand                           $   192   $   193   $   882   $ 1,074   $ 1,289
Savings and clubs                  1,246     1,769     5,508     6,604     7,873
Certificates of deposits           4,674     6,130    21,692    32,230    39,907
                                 -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
                                 $ 6,112   $ 8,092   $28,082   $39,908   $49,069
                                 =======   =======   =======   =======   =======


                                     F - 23


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------

12.  ADVANCES FROM FHLB
-----------------------



                                                                                    June 30,
                                            September 30,          --------------------------------------------
                                            2004 (Unaudited)             2004                      2003
                                         ----------------------    ------------------    ----------------------
                                            Weighted                 Weighted               Weighted
                                            Average                  Average                Average
                                              Rate       Amount       Rate      Amount       Rate       Amount
                                         -----------    -------     ---------   ------   -----------  ---------
                                                                              (In Thousands)
                                                                                       
Due in less than one year                    2.21%      $22,000       1.75%     $32,000       6.55%    $11,000
After one to five years                      5.46%       50,000       5.46%      50,000       5.51%     44,000
After five to ten years                      5.40%       10,000       5.40%      10,000       5.43%     18,000
Other borrowings, payable in
  monthly installments through
  February 25, 2008                          6.03%        2,100       6.03%       2,234       6.03%      2,749
                                                        -------                 -------                -------

                                             4.62%      $84,100       4.21%     $94,234       5.66%    $75,749
                                                        =======                 =======                =======


At June 30,  2004,  of the  $60,000,000  in  advances  due after one through ten
years, $57,000,000 are callable, including $47,000,000 which are callable within
one year.

FHLB advances at September 30, 2004  (unaudited)  and at June 30, 2004 and 2003,
are  collateralized  by the FHLB capital stock owned by the Bank and  investment
securities   held  to  maturity   with  fair  values   totalling   approximately
$107,520,000, $126,810,000 and $90,779,000, respectively.

13.  BENEFIT PLANS
------------------

         Thrift Plan
         -----------

         The Bank sponsors the Financial  Institutions Thrift Plan (the "Plan"),
         pursuant  to  Section  401(k) of the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  for all
         eligible  employees.  Employees  may  elect  to save up to 20% of their
         compensation. The Bank will contribute a matching contribution up to 3%
         of the  employee  annual  compensation.  The Plan  expense  amounted to
         approximately  $66,000  (unaudited),  $60,000  (unaudited),   $264,000,
         $183,000 and $163,000 for the three months ended September 30, 2004 and
         2003, and the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively.

         Retirement Plan
         ---------------

         The Bank has a non-contributory multiple-employer pension plan covering
         all eligible employees.  Significant  actuarial assumptions include the
         projected  unit credit cost valuation  method and an annual  investment
         rate of 8.25%,  8.25% and 8.00% for the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003
         and 2002,  respectively.  At the date of latest  plan  review,  the net
         assets available for plan benefits exceeded the actuarial present value
         of accumulated plan benefits.  Data for the actuarial  present value of
         accumulated vested and non-vested benefits is not determinable for this
         multiple-employer  retirement  plan.  During  the years  ended June 30,
         2004, 2003 and 2002,  total pension plan expense and  contributions  to
         the  plan  were  approximately   $1,193,000,   $685,000  and  $573,000,
         respectively. During the three months ended September 30, 2004 and 2003
         (unaudited), total pension plan expense totalled $306,000 and $298,000,
         respectively,  and  contributions  to  the  plan  totalled  $  -0-  and
         $178,000, respectively.

                                     F - 24


                                      KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                    NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------

         Retirement Plan  (Cont'd.)

         PSB, a subsidiary of Pulaski,  had a non-contributory  employer pension
         plan covering all eligible employees. The plan assets, in the amount of
         $3,010,355,   were  transferred  to  the  multi-employer  pension  plan
         covering  employees  of the PSB on the date of merger.  During the year
         ended June 30, 2002, PSB contributed  $398,000 to the plan and recorded
         expenses  of  $180,000.  No  contributions  were  made to this plan and
         expenses of $63,000 were recorded during the year ended June 30, 2003.

         WESB,  a  subsidiary  of West  Essex  had a  non-contributory  employer
         pension plan ("the Plan") covering all eligible employees. The Plan was
         terminated  effective  as  of  the  last  business  day  prior  to  the
         acquisition of WESB by the Company.


                                     F - 25



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------

The following  table sets forth the Plan's  funded status and  components of net
periodic cost (in thousands):

                                                                 June 30,
                                                         -----------------------
                                                           2004           2003
                                                         -------        ------- 

Change in benefit obligation

   Benefit obligation - beginning                        $ 5,294        $ 4,805
   Service cost                                                -            152
   Interest cost                                             284            241
   Actuarial loss                                              -            640
   Annuity payments                                         (100)           (75)
   Curtailments                                                -           (469)
                                                         -------        ------- 

   Benefit obligation - ending                           $ 5,478        $ 5,294
                                                         =======        =======

Change in plan assets

   Fair value of assets - beginning                      $ 4,122        $ 3,310
     Actual return on plan assets                            411            260
     Employer contribution                                    80            627
     Annuity payments                                       (100)           (75)
                                                         -------        ------- 

   Fair value of assets - ending                         $ 4,513        $ 4,122
                                                         =======        =======

Reconciliation of funded status

   Accumulation benefit obligation                       $ 5,478        $ 5,294
                                                         =======        =======

   Projected benefit obligation                           (5,478)        (5,294)
   Fair value of assets                                    4,513          4,122
   Unrecognized gain/loss                                    (96)             -
                                                         -------        ------- 

   Accrued pension cost included in
     other liabilities                                   $(1,061)       $(1,172)
                                                         =======        ======= 

                                     F - 26

                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------

                                                           Year Ended June 30,
                                                         ----------------------
                                                           2004           2003
                                                         -------        -------
Net periodic pension expenses

   Service cost                                          $     -        $   152
   Interest cost                                             284            241
   Expected return on plan assets                           (315)          (216)
   Amortization of transition obligation                       -             24
   Unrecognized (gain)/loss                                    -             12
   Unrecognized past service liability                         -             40
   Curtailment and purchase credit                             -          1,211
                                                         -------        -------
   Total pension expense                                 $   (31)       $ 1,464
                                                         =======        =======

          For the three months ended  September  30, 2004 and 2003  (unaudited),
          pension expense totalled $ -0-.


       Valuation assumptions

          Amortization period                             10.49           10.82
          Discount rate                                    5.42%           6.75%
          Long-term rate                                   8.50%           8.50%
          Salary increases                                  N/A            4.00%

         The Plan assets are invested in six diversified investment funds of the
         RSI  Retirement  Trust (the  "Trust"),  a no-load  series of open-ended
         mutual  fund.  The Trust has been  given  discretion  by the West Essex
         Bank,  F.S.B., to determine the appropriate  strategic asset allocation
         versus plan  liabilities.  The  percentage of total fair value by asset
         category follows:


                                                                 June 30,
                                                         -----------------------
                                                           2004           2003
                                                         -----------   ---------

          Equity securities                                  53%           51%
          Debt securities (Bond Mutual Funds)                47%           49%
                                                            ---           --- 

                                                            100%          100%
                                                            ===           === 

         The expected long-term rate of return on assets was based on historical
         returns  earned by equities  and fixed income  securities,  adjusted to
         reflect  expectations of future returns as applied to the Plan's target
         allocation of asset classes. The target allocation of asset classes was
         65% in equity securities and 35% in debt securities.

         During the fiscal year ending  June 30,  2005,  the Bank is expected to
         contribute in cash approximately $1,061,000. The total benefit payments
         expected to be paid are $5,478,000.


                                     F - 27


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------

         Benefit Equalization Plan ("BEP")
         ---------------------------------

         The  Bank  has an  unfunded  non-qualified  plan to  compensate  senior
         officers of the Bank who  participate in the Bank's  qualified  benefit
         plans for certain  benefits  lost under such plans by reason of benefit
         limitations  imposed by Sections  415 and 401 of the  Internal  Revenue
         Code.  There  were  approximately  $59,000  contributions  made  to and
         benefits  paid under the BEP during  both the year ended June 30,  2004
         and 2003. There were no contributions  made or benefits paid during the
         year ended June 30, 2002.


         The following  table sets forth the BEP's funded status and  components
of net periodic pension cost (in thousands):


                                                                   June 30,
                                                             -------------------
                                                                2004       2003
                                                             -------    -------

Change in benefit obligation

   Benefit obligation - beginning                            $ 1,328    $   993
     Service cost                                                 24         12
     Interest cost                                                98         72
     Actuarial loss                                                -        310
     Benefit payments                                            (59)       (59)
                                                             -------    ------- 

   Benefit obligation - ending                               $ 1,391    $ 1,328
                                                             =======    =======

Change in plan assets

   Fair value of assets - beginning                          $     -    $     -
     Actual return on plan assets                                  -          -
     Settlements                                                  59         59
     Contributions                                               (59)       (59)
                                                             -------    ------- 

   Fair value of assets - ending                             $     -    $     -
                                                             =======    =======

Reconciliation of funded status

   Accumulated benefit obligation                            $  (954)   $  (841)
                                                             -------    ------- 

   Projected benefit obligation                               (1,391)    (1,328)
   Fair value of assets                                            -          -
                                                             -------    ------- 

   Funded status                                              (1,391)    (1,328)
   Unrecognized prior service cost                               (50)       (42)
   Unrecognized net actuarial loss                               595        672
                                                             -------    ------- 

   Accrued pension cost included in other liabilities        $  (846)   $  (698)
                                                             =======    ======= 

                                     F - 28

                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------


                                                              June 30,
                                                        ------------------------
                                                         2004             2003
                                                         ----             ----
       Value assumptions

          Discount rate                                  7.50%            7.50%
          Salary increase rate                           5.50%            5.50%






                                                                     Year Ended June 30,
                                                                 ------------------------------
                                                                   2004        2003       2002
                                                                   ----        ----       ----
                                                                                
       Net periodic pension expense
          Service cost                                            $  24       $  12      $  30
          Interest cost                                              98          72         68
          Amortization of unrecognized past service cost              8           8         20
          Amortization of unrecognized net actuarial loss            77          38         42
                                                                  -----       -----      -----
                                                                  $ 207       $ 130      $ 160
                                                                  =====       =====      =====


          During the three months ended September 30, 2004 and 2003 (unaudited),
          net   periodic   pension   expense   totalled   $52,000  and  $52,000,
          respectively.

       Valuation Assumptions
          Discount rate                            7.50%     7.50%     7.50%
          Salary increase rate                     5.50%     5.50%     5.50%

         It is estimated that  contributions  of  approximately  $59,000 will be
         made during the year ending June 30, 2005.

         Stock based compensation plans
         ------------------------------

         Pulaski  Savings  Bank and West  Essex  Savings  Bank  each had both an
         Employee Stock Ownership Plan and a Stock  Incentive Plan.  These plans
         were fully  funded  and  expenses  were  recorded  through  the date of
         merger.  Expenses  related  to  these  plans  aggregated  $789,000  and
         $585,000  for the years  ended  June 30,  2003 and 2002,  respectively.
         Small  amounts  representing  unallotted  shares  on the  dates  of the
         mergers were cancelled.


                                     F - 29


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------

         Stock based compensation plans  (Cont'd.)
         ------------------------------  ---------

         The Stock  Incentive Plan included both stock awards and stock options.
         Stock awards were expensed over the vesting  period based upon the fair
         value of awards at the grant dates.  Stock  options were  accounted for
         using  the  intrinsic   value  method  in  accordance  with  Accounting
         Principles  Board  Opinion  No.  25,  "Accounting  for Stock  Issued to
         Employees";  accordingly,  no expense was  recognized  as the  exercise
         prices of all  option  grants  were  equal to the  market  value of the
         underlying  stock on the grant dates.  The weighted  average grant date
         fair value of options  granted during the years ended June 30, 2003 and
         2002 (none were granted thereafter),  estimated using the Black-Scholes
         option-pricing model, and assumptions used in such valuations,  were as
         follows:




                                                                                     Year Ended June 30,
                                                                                 -----------------------------
                                                                                     2003            2002
                                                                                 -------------   -------------
                                                                                             
             Options granted (A)                                                        1,000          10,829
             Weighted average grant-date fair value per option (A)                     $ 8.84          $ 4.72
             Expected common stock dividend yield                                       2.93%           3.29%
             Expected volatility                                                       58.17%          38.08%
             Expected option life                                                   6.5 Years       6.5 Years
             Risk-free interest rate                                                    4.18%           4.66%


                  (A)    Represents  actual  options  granted  and has not  been
                         converted to equivalent Kearny Financial Corp.  amounts
                         (see Note 2).

                                      F-30



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------


         Postretirement Welfare Plan
         ---------------------------

         The Bank has a  postretirement  group term life insurance plan covering
         all  eligible  employees.  The  benefits  are based on age and years of
         service.  The plan is  unfunded.  The  following  table  sets forth the
         accrued  accumulated  postretirement  benefit  obligation  and  the net
         periodic postretirement benefit cost (in thousands):


                                                                   June 30,
                                                               -----------------
                                                                2004       2003
                                                               -----      ----- 

Change in benefit obligation

   Benefit obligation - beginning                              $ 378      $ 248
   Service cost                                                   18         12
   Interest cost                                                  22         19
   Actuarial loss                                                 (3)        17
   Premiums/claims paid                                           (6)        (5)
   Plan amendment                                                  -         87
                                                               -----      ----- 

   Benefit obligation - ending                                 $ 409      $ 378
                                                               =====      =====

Change in plan assets

   Fair value of assets - beginning                            $   -      $   -
     Actual return on plan assets                                  -          -
     Premiums/claims paid                                          6          5
     Contributions                                                (6)        (5)
                                                               -----      ----- 

   Fair value of assets - ending                               $   -      $   -
                                                               =====      =====

Reconciliation of funded status

   Accumulation benefit obligation                              (409)      (378)
   Fair value of assets                                            -          -
                                                               -----      ----- 

   Funded status                                                (409)      (378)
   Unrecognized net actuarial loss                                (9)        (6)
   Unrecognized prior service cost                                74         83
                                                               -----      ----- 
   Accrued postretirement benefit cost included in
     other liabilities                                         $(344)     $(301)
                                                               =====      ===== 

                                     F - 31


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------



                                                                       Year Ended June 30,
                                                                  ----------------------------
                                                                    2004       2003      2002
                                                                    ----       ----      ----
                                                                               
       Net periodic postretirement benefit cost:

          Service cost                                              $ 18       $ 12      $ 11
          Interest cost                                               22         19        16
          Amortization of unrecognized net actuarial gain              -          -        (1)
          Amortization of unrecognized past service liability          9          4         -
                                                                    ----       ----      ----
                                                                    $ 49       $ 35      $ 26
                                                                    ====       ====      ====


         During the three months ended September 30, 2004 and 2003  (unaudited),
         net   postretirement   benefit  cost  totalled   $14,000  and  $12,000,
         respectively.

         The discount rate and projected  salary increase rate used in computing
         the accumulated postretirement benefit obligation were 6.63% and 4.00%,
         respectively,  at June 30, 2004 and 5.75% and 3.25%,  respectively,  at
         June 30, 2003; and 7.00% and 4.25%, respectively, at June 30, 2002.

         On December 8, 2003,  the  President  signed the Medicare  Prescription
         Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 (the Act) into law. The
         Act introduces a voluntary  prescription drug benefit under Medicare as
         well as a federal subsidy to sponsors of retiree health care plans that
         provide at least an actuarially equivalent benefit. FASB Staff Position
         (FSP) No. FAS 106-1 "Accounting and Disclosure  Requirements Related to
         the Medicare  Prescription  Drug,  Improvement and Modernization act of
         2003" (FSP 106-1),  permits deferring the recognizing of the effects of
         the Act on its Postretirement Health and Life Plans.

         Since the Bank does not provide  medical  coverage  for  retirees,  the
         health  care cost trend has no impact on the Bank's  liability  and FSB
         No. FAS 106-1 is not applicable.

         It is estimated that  contributions  of  approximately  $6,000 will  be
         made during the year ending June 30, 2005.

         Directors' Consultation and Retirement Plan ("DCRP")
         ----------------------------------------------------

         The Bank has an unfunded  retirement plan for  non-employee  directors.
         The  benefits are payable  based on term of service as a director.  The
         discount  rate used in computing  the  actuarial  present  value of the
         projected benefit  obligation was 6.63% (2004),  5.75% (2003) and 7.00%
         (2002).  The  increase  in future  compensation  levels  used was 4.00%
         (2004), 3.25% (2003) and 4.25% (2002).


                                      F - 32


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------


         The following  table sets forth the DCRP's funded status and components
of net periodic cost (in thousands):

                                                                 June 30,
                                                           --------------------
                                                            2004         2003
                                                           -------      -------

Change in benefit obligation

Projected benefit obligation - beginning                   $ 1,487      $ 1,019
Service cost                                                    78           56
Interest cost                                                   83           78
Actuarial loss                                                   2          143
Annuity payments                                               (89)         (51)
Plan amendments                                                  -          242
                                                           -------      ------- 

Projected benefit obligation - ending                      $ 1,561      $ 1,487
                                                           =======      =======

Change in plan assets

  Fair value of assets - beginning                         $     -      $     -
    Actual return on plan assets                                 -            -
    Settlements                                                 89           51
    Contributions                                              (89)         (51)
                                                           -------      ------- 

  Fair value of assets - ending                            $     -      $     -
                                                           =======      =======

Reconciliation of funded status

  Accumulated benefit obligation                           $(1,361)     $(1,335)
                                                           -------      ------- 

  Projected benefit obligation                              (1,561)      (1,487)
  Fair value of assets                                           -            -
                                                           -------      ------- 

  Funded status                                             (1,561)      (1,487)
  Unrecognized transition obligation                           219          263
  Unrecognized net actuarial loss                               (7)         (10)
  Unrecognized prior service cost                              341          375
                                                           -------      ------- 

  Accrued cost included in other liabilities               $(1,008)     $  (859)
                                                           =======      ======= 

                                     F - 33

                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


13.  BENEFIT PLANS (Cont'd.)
--------------------------



                                                           Year Ended June 30,
                                                         ----------------------
                                                          2004    2003     2002
                                                         -----   -----    -----
Net periodic plan cost
    Service cost                                         $  78   $  56    $  39
    Interest cost                                           83      78       52
    Amortization of unrecognized transition obligation      44      44       44
    Amortization of unrecognized net actuarial gain          -      (2)     (28)
    Amortization of unrecognized past service liability     33      24       15
                                                         -----   -----    -----

                                                         $ 238   $ 200    $ 122
                                                         =====   =====    =====

         During the three months ended September 30, 2004 and 2003  (unaudited),
         net periodic plan cost totalled $66,000 and $60,000, respectively.

         Effective January 1, 2003, the plan was amended to reflect that, upon a
         change of control,  all benefits  payable shall be immediately  paid to
         the  participants  in the form of a lump sum  payment.  It is estimated
         that  contributions of  approximately  $129,000 will be made during the
         year ended June 30, 2005.

         During the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002,  contributions and
         benefits paid  totalling  $89,000,  $51,000 and $32,000,  respectively,
         were made to the Plan.

         Pulaski   Savings  Bank  had  an  unfunded   retirement  plan  for  its
         non-employee  directors with benefits  payable based on term of service
         as a director.  As a result of the merger,  all directors  became fully
         vested.  The  amount  vested  is to  be  paid,  either  in  ten  annual
         installments,  or lump sum if elected by the director or in full to the
         surviving  beneficiary  in case of deceased  director.  During the year
         ended June 30, 2004 two deceased directors surviving beneficiaries were
         paid $284,000 and during the year ended June 30, 2003 one director, who
         elected for lump sum was paid  $120,000.  The two remaining  director's
         elected  annual  payments  in the  aggregate  amount  of  approximately
         $32,000. The present value of future remaining annual payments,  in the
         amount of $254,000 and $594,000,  is included in other  liabilities  at
         June 30, 2004 and 2003,  respectively.  The Bank recorded expenses with
         respect to this plan during the three months ended  September  30, 2004
         and 2003  (unaudited)  and the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002
         of $ -0-, $ -0- , $ -0-, $81,000 and $141,000, respectively.


14.  STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY AND REGULATORY CAPITAL
------------------------------------------------

The Office of Thrift  Supervision  (the "OTS") imposes  various  restrictions or
requirements   on  the  ability  of  savings   institutions   to  make   capital
distributions,  including  cash  dividends.  A  savings  institution  that  is a
subsidiary of a savings and loan holding company, such as the Bank, must file an
application  or a notice  with  the OTS at least  thirty  days  before  making a
capital  distribution.  A savings institution must file an application for prior
approval of a capital  distribution  if: (i) it is not  eligible  for  expedited
treatment  under the  applications  processing  rules of the OTS; (ii) the total
amount  of  all  capital   distributions,   including   the   proposed   capital
distribution,  for the applicable  calendar year would exceed an amount equal to
the  savings   institution's   net  income  for  that  year  to  date  plus  the
institution's retained

                                     F - 34



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



14.  STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY AND REGULATORY CAPITAL (Cont'd.)
--------------------------------------------------------

net  income  for the  preceding  two  years;  (iii) it would not  adequately  be
capitalized  after the  capital  distribution;  or (iv) the  distribution  would
violate an agreement with the OTS or applicable regulations.  As a result of the
dividend paid by the Bank to the Company in connection  with the  acquisition of
West Essex and its subsidiaries,  it is likely that the Bank will be required to
file  an   application,   rather  than  a  notice,   for  any  planned   capital
distributions.

The Bank is subject to various regulatory capital  requirements  administered by
Federal  banking  agencies.  Failure to meet minimum  capital  requirements  can
initiate certain mandatory - and possibly additional  discretionary - actions by
regulators  that,  if  undertaken,  could have a direct  material  effect on the
Bank's consolidated financial statements.  Under capital adequacy guidelines and
the  regulatory  framework  for  prompt  corrective  action,  the Bank must meet
specific  capital  guidelines that involve  quantitative  measures of the Bank's
assets,  liabilities,  and certain  of-balance-sheet  items as accumulated under
regulatory accounting  practices.  The Bank's capital amounts and classification
are also subject to qualitative  judgments by the regulators  about  components,
risk weighting, and other factors.

The  OTS  may  disapprove  a  notice  or  deny  an  application  for  a  capital
distribution if: (i) the savings institution would be undercapitalized following
the capital  distribution;  (ii) the proposed capital distribution raises safety
and  soundness  concerns;  or (iii) the  capital  distribution  would  violate a
prohibition  contained  in any statute,  regulation  or  agreement.  The capital
distributions  by Kearny Financial Corp., as a savings and loan holding company,
will not be subject to the OTS capital distribution rules.

Quantitative  measures  established  by  regulation to ensure  capital  adequacy
require  the Bank to  maintain  minimum  amounts  and ratios of Total and Tier 1
capital (as defined in the  regulations) to  risk-weighted  assets (as defined),
and of Tier 1 capital to  adjusted  total  assets (as  defined).  The  following
tables present a  reconciliation  of capital per accepted  principles  generally
accepted in the United  States of America  ("GAAP") and  regulatory  capital and
information as to the Bank's capital levels at the dates presented:



                                                                     June 30,
                                              September 30,   -----------------------
                                              2004 (Unaudited)   2004       2003
                                              --------------- ----------   ----------
                                                            (In Thousands)
                                                                      
GAAP capital:
  Consolidated capital                           $ 297,802    $ 293,505    $ 295,669
  Less:  Unconsolidated capital of the Company      (1,531)      (1,520)     (52,543)
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------

  Bank capital                                     296,271      291,985      243,126

Less: Unrealized gain on securities                (10,547)     (10,008)      (7,771)
         Goodwill                                  (82,263)     (82,263)     (31,746)
         Intangible assets                          (2,041)      (2,200)      (2,836)
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------

Core and tangible capital                          201,420      197,514      200,773
Add:  General valuation allowance                    5,290        5,029        5,065
         Unrealized gain on equity securities        6,957        7,026        5,486
                                                 ---------    ---------    ---------

   Total regulatory capital                      $ 213,667    $ 209,569    $ 211,324
                                                 =========    =========    =========


                                      F-35



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


14.  STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY AND REGULATORY CAPITAL (Cont'd.)
--------------------------------------------------------



                                                                             September 30, 2004 (Unaudited)
                                                -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                           To Be Well Capitalized
                                                                                     Minimum Capital       Under Prompt Corrective
                                                          Actual                      Requirements            Action Provisions
                                                -----------------------   ----------------------------  ------------------------
                                                     Amount     Ratio            Amount         Ratio     Amount          Ratio
                                                ------------- ---------   --------------- ------------  ----------  ------------
                                                                          (Dollars in Thousands)

                                                                                                            
Total Capital (to risk-weighted assets)            $ 213,667     33.18 %        $ 51,522         8.00 %  $ 64,403         10.00 %

Tier 1 Capital (to risk-weighted assets)             201,420     31.27                 -            -      38,642          6.00

Core (Tier 1) Capital (to adjusted total assets)     201,420     11.15            54,170         3.00      90,284          5.00

Tangible Capital (to adjusted total assets)          201,420     11.15            27,085         1.50           -             -




                                                                                     June 30, 2004
                                                ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                            To Be Well Capitalized
                                                                                     Minimum Capital        Under Prompt Corrective
                                                          Actual                      Requirements             Action Provisions
                                                ------------------------   ---------------------------- --------------------------
                                                     Amount      Ratio            Amount         Ratio      Amount          Ratio
                                                -------------  ---------   --------------- ------------ ------------  ------------
                                                                             (Dollars in Thousands)

                                                                                                            
Total Capital (to risk-weighted assets)            $ 209,569      32.56 %        $ 51,490         8.00 %   $ 64,362         10.00 %

Tier 1 Capital (to risk-weighted assets)             197,514      30.69                 -            -       38,617          6.00

Core (Tier 1) Capital (to adjusted total assets)     197,514      10.76            55,068         3.00       91,780          5.00

Tangible Capital (to adjusted total assets)          197,514      10.76            27,534         1.50            -             -





                                                                                     June 30, 2003
                                                ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                             To Be Well Capitalized
                                                                                     Minimum Capital         Under Prompt Corrective
                                                          Actual                      Requirements              Action Provisions
                                                ------------------------   ----------------------------   -------------------------
                                                     Amount       Ratio           Amount         Ratio       Amount          Ratio
                                                -------------  ---------   --------------- ------------   -----------  ------------
                                                                             (Dollars in Thousands)

                                                                                                              
Total Capital (to risk-weighted assets)            $ 211,324      33.60 %        $ 50,317         8.00 %    $ 62,896         10.00 %

Tier 1 Capital (to risk-weighted assets)             200,773      31.92                 -            -        37,738          6.00

Core (Tier 1) Capital (to adjusted total assets)     200,773      10.62            56,712         3.00        94,519          5.00

Tangible Capital (to adjusted total assets)          200,773      10.62            28,356         1.50             -             -


On November 3, 2003,  the most recent  notification  from the OTS,  the Bank was
categorized as well  capitalized as of September 30, 2003,  under the regulatory
framework for prompt  corrective  action.  There are no  conditions  existing or
events which have occurred  since  notification  that  management  believes have
changed the Bank's category.

                                     F - 36



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



15. INCOME TAXES
    ------------

The Bank qualifies as a savings institution under the provisions of the Internal
Revenue Code (the "IRC").  Retained  earnings at September 30, 2004  (unaudited)
and at  June  30,  2004,  includes  approximately  $30.5  million  of  bad  debt
allowance,  pursuant to the IRC, for which income taxes have not been  provided.
If such amount is used for purposes other than or to absorb bad debts, including
distributions  in  liquidation,  it will be  subject  to income  tax at the then
current rate.

The components of income taxes are as follows (in thousands):

                           Three Months Ended
                              September 30,         Year Ended June 30,
                           ------------------   ------------------------------
                             2004       2003      2004       2003       2002
                           -------    -------   -------    -------    -------
                               (Unaudited)

 Current tax expense:
     Federal income        $ 1,865    $   601   $ 3,600    $ 3,319    $ 7,240
     State income              279        265     1,589      2,652        714
                           -------    -------   -------    -------    -------

                             2,144        866     5,189      5,971      7,954
                           -------    -------   -------    -------    -------
 Deferred tax (benefit):
     Federal income           (498)        78       470        (72)       (25)
     State income              (84)        14        86       (662)        (3)
                           -------    -------   -------    -------    -------

                              (582)        92       556       (734)       (28)
                           -------    -------   -------    -------    -------

                           $ 1,562    $   958   $ 5,745    $ 5,237    $ 7,926
                           =======    =======   =======    =======    =======

The following table presents a reconciliation  between the reported income taxes
and the income  taxes which would be  computed  by applying  the normal  federal
income tax rate of 35% to income before income taxes (in thousands):




                                                         Three Months Ended
                                                            September 30,            Year Ended June 30,
                                                       ---------------------   ---------------------------------
                                                           2004        2003        2004        2003        2002
                                                         -------     -------     -------     -------     -------
                                                              (Unaudited)

                                                                                            
Federal income tax expense                               $ 1,875     $ 1,118     $ 6,525     $ 3,252     $ 8,545
Increases (reductions) in income taxes resulting from:
      Tax exempt interest                                   (448)       (445)     (1,780)     (1,301)       (894)
      New Jersey state tax,
       net of federal income tax effect                      127         184       1,106       1,314         469
      Compensation in excess of limit                          -           -           -       1,548           -
      Non deductible merger expenses                           -         207         207         934         210
      Tax benefit on disqualified distribution                 -           -           -        (610)          -
      Other items, net                                         8        (106)       (313)        100        (404)
                                                         -------     -------     -------     -------     -------

Total income tax expense                                 $ 1,562     $   958     $ 5,745     $ 5,237     $ 7,926
                                                         =======     =======     =======     =======     =======

Effective income tax rate                                  29.15%      30.00%      30.82%      56.36%      32.46%
                                                         =======     =======     =======     =======     =======


The effective  income tax rate  represents  total income tax expense  divided by
income before income taxes.

                                     F - 37

                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



15.  INCOME TAXES (Cont'd.)
-------------------------

The tax effects of  existing  temporary  differences  that give rise to deferred
income tax assets and liabilities are as follows (in thousands):



                                                                                     June 30,
                                                            September 30,      --------------------
                                                                 2004             2004      2003
                                                           -----------------   ----------  --------
                                                             (Unaudited)
                                                                                    
      Deferred income tax assets

      Allowance for loan losses                               $ 2,177           $ 2,108    $ 2,031
      Goodwill                                                  1,018               998      1,503
      Deferred directors' fees                                      -                 -         16
      Benefit plans                                             1,554             1,069      1,048
      Compensation                                                  -                 -        168
      Other                                                        77                71         89
                                                             --------          --------     ------
                                                                            
                                                                4,826             4,246      4,855
                                                             --------          --------     ------
      Deferred income tax liabilities                                        
                                                                             
      Unrealized gain on available for sale securities          5,679             5,410      4,114
      Depreciation                                                380               377        337
      Other                                                        74                79        172
                                                             --------          --------     ------
                                                                             
                                                                6,133             5,866      4,623
                                                             --------          --------     ------
                                                                             
      Net deferred income tax (liabilities) assets           $ (1,307)         $ (1,620)    $  232
                                                             ========          ========     ======

                                                                             
                                                                       
16.    COMMITMENTS
------------------

The Bank  has  non-cancellable  operating  leases  for  branch  offices.  Rental
expenses  paid  during  the  three  months  ended  September  30,  2004 and 2003
(unaudited) and the years ended June 30, 2004, 2003 and 2002, were approximately
$82,000, $90,000, $343,000, $352,000 and $362,000, respectively.  Future minimum
rental commitments are as follows:


         Year Ended June 30,                             Amount
         -------------------                             ------

                  2005                              $   272,000
                  2006                                  282,000
                  2007                                  257,000
                  2008                                  252,000
                  2009                                  214,000
                     Thereafter                         402,000
                                                    -----------

                                                    $ 1,684,000
                                                    ===========


                                     F - 38



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



16.  COMMITMENTS (Cont'd.)
------------------------

The Bank is a party to financial instruments with  off-balance-sheet risk in the
normal course of business to meet the financing  needs of its  customers.  These
financial  instruments include commitments to extend credit. The Bank's exposure
to  credit  loss in the  event  of  nonperformance  by the  other  party  to the
financial  instrument  for  commitments  to extend credit is  represented by the
contractual notional amount of those instruments.  The Bank uses the same credit
policies  in  making  commitments  and  conditional  obligations  as it does for
on-balance-sheet instruments.

The outstanding loan commitments are as follows (in thousands):



                                                                June 30,
                                            September 30, --------------------
                                                2004        2004        2003
                                          --------------- --------    --------
         (Unaudited)

         Mortgage loans                      $ 6,872      $ 23,678    $ 26,511
         Home equity loans and lines           2,635         4,027       3,351
         Commercial lines of credit            2,240           265         175
         Construction loans                    2,862         4,483       1,992
         Purchase of participations              607           607       1,100
         Construction loans in process         5,613         5,278       5,666
         Undisbursed funds from approved
           lines of credit                    25,763        23,817      20,474
                                            --------      --------    --------
 
                                            $ 46,592      $ 62,155    $ 59,269
                                            ========      ========    ========

At September 30, 2004  (unaudited),  the outstanding  mortgage loan  commitments
include  $4,389,000  for fixed rate loans with interest rates ranging from 4.63%
to 6.50% and $2,483,000  for adjustable  rate loans with an initial rate ranging
from 4.50% to 6.50%. Home equity loan commitments  include  $2,570,000 for fixed
rate loans with  interest  rates  ranging  from 4.75% to 6.50% and  $65,000  for
adjustable rate loans with an initial rate of 4.50%.  Commercial lines of credit
commitments  are for loans with interest rates ranging from 0.50% to 1.00% above
the  prime  rate  published  in  the  Wall  Street  Journal.  Construction  loan
commitments  are for loans with interest rates ranging from 1.00% to 1.50% above
the prime rate  published in the Wall Street  Journal.  Commitments  to purchase
participations  are for loans at a fixed rate, set at the funding date,  ranging
from 1.35% to 1.36%  above the  Federal  Home Loan Bank of New York CIP  advance
rate for ten year or 15 year advances.  Undisbursed funds from approved lines of
credit are adjustable rate loans with interest rates ranging from 1.00% below to
2.00% above the prime rate published in the Wall Street Journal.


                                     F - 39



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


16.  COMMITMENTS (Cont'd.)
------------------------

At June 30, 2004, the outstanding  mortgage loan commitments include $22,980,000
for fixed  rate  loans  with  interest  rates  ranging  from  4.38% to 6.50% and
$1,698,000 for adjustable  rate loans with an initial rate ranging from 3.88% to
6.38%. Home equity loan commitments include $3,019,000 for fixed rate loans with
interest  rates  ranging from 4.63% to 6.25% and $949,000  for  adjustable  rate
loans with an initial rate of 4.00%.  Commercial lines of credit commitments are
for loans with  interest  rates ranging from 0.50% to 1.00% above the prime rate
published in the Wall Street  Journal.  Construction  loan  commitments  are for
loans with  interest  rates  ranging  from  1.00% to 1.50%  above the prime rate
published in the Wall Street Journal. Commitments to purchase participations are
for loans at a fixed rate, set at the funding date,  ranging from 1.35% to 1.36%
above the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York CIP advance rate for ten year or 15
year  advances.  Undisbursed  funds from approved lines of credit are adjustable
rate loans with interest rates ranging from 1.00% below to 2.00% above the prime
rate published in the Wall Street Journal.

At June 30, 2003, the outstanding  mortgage loan commitments include $20,334,000
for fixed  rate  loans  with  interest  rates  ranging  from  4.50% to 6.75% and
$6,177,000 for adjustable  rate loans with an initial rate ranging from 4.25% to
7.00%. Home equity loan commitments include $2,664,000 for fixed rate loans with
interest  rates  ranging from 4.25% to 6.50% and $687,000  for  adjustable  rate
loans with an initial rate of 4.25%.  Commercial lines of credit commitments are
for loans with  interest  rates ranging from 1.00% to 1.50% above the prime rate
published in the Wall Street  Journal.  Construction  loan  commitments  are for
loans with  interest  rates  ranging  from  1.00% to 1.50%  above the prime rate
published in the Wall Street Journal. Commitments to purchase participations are
for loans at a fixed rate, set at the funding date,  ranging from 1.35% to 1.60%
above  the  Federal  Home Loan  Bank of New York CIP  advance  rate for ten year
advances,  or the  prime  rate  published  in the  Wall  Street  Journal  on the
fifteenth day of the month.  Undisbursed funds from approved lines of credit are
adjustable  rate loans with interest rates ranging from 1.00% to 1.50% above the
prime rate published in the Wall Street Journal.

Commitments  to extend  credit are  agreements  to lend to a customer as long as
there is no violation of any condition established in the contract.  Commitments
generally  have fixed  expiration  dates or other  termination  clauses  and may
require  payment of a fee. Since many of the  commitments are expected to expire
without  being  drawn  upon,  the total  commitment  amounts do not  necessarily
represent  future  cash   requirements.   The  Bank  evaluates  each  customer's
creditworthiness  on a case-by-case  basis. The amount of collateral obtained if
deemed  necessary by the Bank upon extension of credit is based on  management's
credit evaluation of the counterparty.

The Bank has  established  an  overnight  line of  credit  and  companion  (DRA)
commitment,  each in the amount of $50,000,000,  with the Federal Home Loan Bank
of New York,  which  expire on  December  15,  2004.  As of  September  30, 2004
(unaudited) and June 30, 2004, no funds were drawn against these credit lines.

At September 30, 2004  (unaudited)  and June 30, 2004, the Bank has  commitments
for  building   improvements   in  the  amount  of  $2,582,000  and  $1,477,000,
respectively.  In addition, the Bank also has, in the normal course of business,
commitments for servicers and supplies. Management does not anticipate losses on
any of these transactions.

The Company and subsidiaries are also party to litigation which arises primarily
in the ordinary course of business.  In the opinion of management,  the ultimate
disposition of such litigation  should not have a material adverse effect on the
consolidated financial position of the Company.

                                     F - 40



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



17.  FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
----------------------------------------

The following  methods and  assumptions  were used to estimate the fair value of
each class of financial instruments:

              Cash and cash equivalents and interest receivable
              -------------------------------------------------

              The carrying  amounts for cash and cash  equivalents  and interest
              receivable  approximate  fair value  because  they mature in three
              months or less.

              Securities available  for  sale,  investment  securities  held  to
              ------------------------------------------------------------------
              maturity and mortgage-backed securities held to maturity
              --------------------------------------------------------

              The fair  values for  securities  available  for sale,  investment
              securities held to maturity and mortgage-backed securities held to
              maturity  are based on quoted  market  prices when  available.  If
              quoted  market prices are not  available,  fair value is estimated
              using quoted market prices for similar securities.

              Loans receivable
              ----------------

              The fair value of loans receivable is estimated by discounting the
              future cash flows,  using the current rates at which similar loans
              would be made to borrowers with similar credit ratings and for the
              same remaining maturities, of such loans.

              Deposits
              --------

              The fair value of demand,  savings  and club  accounts is equal to
              the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value
              of  certificates  of deposit is  estimated  using rates  currently
              offered for  deposits of similar  remaining  maturities.  The fair
              value  estimates  do not include the benefit that results from the
              low-cost funding provided by deposit  liabilities  compared to the
              cost of borrowing funds in the market.

              Advances from FHLB
              ------------------

              Fair value is estimated using rates currently offered for advances
              of similar remaining maturities.

              Commitments
              -----------

              The fair value of  commitments  to fund credit lines and originate
              or participate in loans is estimated using fees currently  charged
              to enter into similar agreements taking into account the remaining
              terms of the  agreements and the present  creditworthiness  of the
              counterparties.  For fixed rate loans commitments, fair value also
              considers the  difference  between  current levels of interest and
              the committed rates.


                                     F - 41


                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



17.  FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (Cont'd.)
------------------------------------------------

The carrying  amounts and estimated fair value of financial  instruments  are as
follows (in thousands):



                                                                                                                     June 30,
                                                       September 30,          --------------------------------------------------
                                                            2004                           2004                          2003
                                             ------------------------------  ------------------------   ------------------------
                                                   Carrying      Estimated     Carrying     Estimated     Carrying    Estimated
                                                    Amount       Fair Value     Amount     Fair Value      Amount     Fair Value
                                             ---------------   ------------  -----------  -----------   ----------- ------------
                                                      (Unaudited)

                                                                                                        
Cash and cash equivalents                          $ 36,863       $ 36,863     $ 39,488     $ 39,488     $ 325,657    $ 325,657
Securities available for sale                        41,335         41,335       41,564       41,564        37,840       37,840
Investment securities held to maturity              445,769        447,502      435,870      428,775       287,321      293,578
Loans receivable                                    515,196        521,275      505,794     510,437        509,161      522,115
Mortgage-backed securities held to maturity         724,876        734,931      771,353      772,710       681,619      704,874
Interest receivable                                   8,861          8,861        9,861        9,861         8,479        8,479

Financial liabilities

Deposits                                          1,510,810      1,511,876    1,537,510    1,540,029     1,613,684    1,621,335
Advances from FHLB                                   84,100         87,432       94,234       95,217        75,749       81,932


                                                     Stated                      Stated                     Stated
                                                    Contract      Estimated     Contract     Estimated     Contract    Estimated
                                                     Amount       Fair Value     Amount     Fair Value      Amount     Fair Value
                                             ---------------   ------------  -----------  -----------   ----------- ------------

Commitments

To originate loans                                 $ 14,609       $ 14,609     $ 32,453     $ 32,453      $ 32,029     $ 32,029
To participate in loans                                 607            607          607          607         1,100        1,100
Unused lines of credit                               25,763         25,763       23,817       23,817        20,474       20,474
Loans in process                                      5,613          5,613        5,278        5,278         5,666        5,666


         Limitations
         -----------

         Fair  value  estimates  are made at a  specific  point in time based on
         relevant  market   information  and  information  about  the  financial
         instruments.  These  estimates  do not  reflect any premium or discount
         that  could  result  from  offering  for sale at one  time  the  entire
         holdings of a particular financial instrument.  Because no market value
         exists for a  significant  portion of the  financial  instrument,  fair
         value estimates are based on judgments  regarding  future expected loss
         experience,   current  economic  conditions,  risk  characteristics  of
         various  financial  instrument and other factors.  These  estimates are
         subjective  in nature,  involve  uncertainties  and matters of judgment
         and,  therefore,  cannot  be  determined  with  precision.  Changes  in
         assumptions could significantly affect the estimates.

                                     F - 42



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



17.  FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (Cont'd.)
------------------------------------------------

         The fair value estimates are based on existing  on-and-of balance sheet
         financial  instruments  without  attempting  the  value of  anticipated
         future  business and the value of assets and  liabilities  that are not
         considered   financial   instruments.   Other  significant  assets  and
         liabilities  that are not considered  financial  assets and liabilities
         include  premises and equipment,  and advances from borrowers for taxes
         and  insurance.   In  addition,   the  ramifications   related  to  the
         realization of the  unrealized  gains and losses can have a significant
         effect on fair value  estimates and have not been  considered in any of
         the estimates.

         Finally,  reasonable  comparability between financial  institutions may
         not be likely due to the wide range of permitted  valuation  techniques
         and numerous  estimates  which must be made given the absence of active
         secondary markets for many of the financial  instruments.  This lack of
         uniform  valuation   methodologies   introduces  a  greater  degree  of
         subjectivity to these estimated fair values.


                                     F - 43



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



18.  PARENT ONLY FINANCIAL INFORMATION
--------------------------------------

Kearny  Financial  Corp.  operates its wholly owned  subsidiary,  Kearny Federal
Savings Bank and its wholly owned subsidiaries. The consolidated earnings of the
subsidiaries  are  recognized by the Company using equity method of  accounting.
Accordingly,  the  consolidated  earnings of the  subsidiaries  are  recorded as
increase in the Company's investment in the subsidiaries.  The following are the
condensed financial  statements for Kearny Financial Corp. (Parent Company only)
as of September 30, 2004,  and June 30, 2004 and 2003,  and for the three months
ended  September  30,  2004 and 2003,  and each of the  years in the  three-year
period ended June 30, 2004 (in thousands):


                   CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
                   -------------------------------------------




                                                                      June 30,
                                                   September 30, -------------------
                                                        2004       2004       2003
                                                      --------   --------   --------

                                                    (Unaudited)
                                                                      
Assets
------
Cash and amounts due from depository
  institutions                                        $    951   $  1,234   $  1,367
Securities available for sale                                -      1,104      1,046
Accrued interest receivable                                  -          3          3
Investment in subsidiaries                             296,272    291,985    225,790
Deposit for acquisition of West Essex Bancorp, Inc.          -          -     67,853
Other assets                                               671        283        677
                                                      --------   --------   --------

                                                      $297,894   $294,609   $296,736
                                                      ========   ========   ========

Liabilities
-----------

Due to subsidiaries                                   $     92   $  1,104   $    953
Other liabilities                                            -          -        114
Stockholders' equity (A)                               297,802    293,505    295,669
                                                      --------   --------   --------

                                                      $297,894   $294,609   $296,736
                                                      ========   ========   ========


     (A)    At September 30, 2004 (unaudited) and June 30, 2004, the Company was
            wholly owned by Kearny MHC, a Mutual  Holding  Company.  At June 30,
            2003, the Company was 85% owned by Kearny MHC.

                                     F - 44



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



18.  PARENT ONLY FINANCIAL INFORMATION (Cont'd.)
----------------------------------------------



                         CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
                         ------------------------------



                                       Three Months Ended
                                          September 30,           Year Ended June 30,
                                       -------------------   -------------------------------
                                         2004       2003       2004        2003       2002
                                       --------   --------   --------    --------   --------
                                           (Unaudited)
                                                                        
Interest income                        $     17   $     21   $    110    $     86   $    103
Gain on sale of securities available
  for sale                                   71          -          -           -          -
Equity in undistributed earnings of
  the subsidiaries                        3,747      2,829     13,442       5,256     16,804
                                       --------   --------   --------    --------   --------

                                          3,835      2,850     13,552       5,342     16,907
                                       --------   --------   --------    --------   --------

Directors' fees                              33         12         67          32          -
Merger expenses                               -        592        592       1,176        179
Other expenses                                2          8          -          74        288
                                       --------   --------   --------    --------   --------

                                             35        612        659       1,282        467
                                       --------   --------   --------    --------   --------

Income before income taxes                3,800      2,238     12,893       4,060     16,440
Income taxes (benefit) expense                4          3         (4)          5        (50)
                                       --------   --------   --------    --------   --------
                                                                                  
Net income                             $  3,796   $  2,235   $ 12,897    $  4,055   $ 16,490
                                       ========   ========   ========    ========   ========


                                     F - 45



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


18.  PARENT ONLY FINANCIAL INFORMATION (Cont'd.)
----------------------------------------------


                       CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                       ----------------------------------



                                                                 Three Months Ended
                                                                   September 30,             Years Ended June 30,
                                                                --------------------    --------------------------------
                                                                  2004        2003        2004        2003        2002
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
                                                                    (Unaudited)
                                                                                                    
Cash flows from operating activities:
    Net income                                                  $  3,796    $  2,235    $ 12,897    $  4,055    $ 16,490
    Adjustments to reconcile net income
      to net cash (used in) provided by operating activities:
       Equity in undistributed earnings
         of the subsidiaries                                      (3,747)     (2,829)    (13,442)     89,030     (16,804)
       Amortization of premiums                                        -           1           2           4           5
       Realized gain on sale of securities available for sale        (71)          -           -           -           -
       Decrease in accrued interest receivable                         3         (20)          -          40           5
       Decrease in loan receivable                                     -           -           -         961       2,224
       Other assets                                                 (388)        399         394         (79)        152
       Other liabilities                                            (991)        132          16         953         114
       Minority interest in consolidated subsidiaries                  -           -           -         789         582
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
          Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities     (1,398)        (82)       (133)     95,753       2,768
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------

Cash flows from investing activities:
    Purchase of Pulaski minority interest                              -           -           -     (26,433)          -
    Deposit for acquisition of West Essex minority interest            -           -                 (67,853)          -
    Proceeds from sale of securities available for sale            1,115           -           -           -           -
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------
          Net cash used in investment activities                   1,115           -           -     (94,286)          -
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------

Cash flows from financing activities:
    Proceeds from issuance of common stock of West
      Essex Bancorp, Inc.                                              -           -           -         345         277
    Purchase of treasury stock of West Essex Bancorp, Inc.             -           -           -           -      (2,530)
    Dividends paid to minority stockholders of West Essex
      Bancorp, Inc. and Pulaski Bancorp, Inc.                          -           -           -      (1,054)     (1,171)
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------

          Net cash used in financing activities                        -           -           -        (709)     (3,424)
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------

Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents                (283)        (82)       (133)        758        (656)

Cash and cash equivalents - beginning                              1,234       1,367       1,367         609       1,265
                                                                --------    --------    --------    --------    --------

Cash and cash equivalents - ending                              $    951    $  1,285    $  1,234    $  1,367    $    609
                                                                ========    ========    ========    ========    ========

Supplemental disclosure:

    Purchase of minority shares of West Essex                   $      -    $ 17,336    $ 17,336    $      -    $      -
                                                                ========    ========    ========    ========    ========
    Goodwill - West Essex acquisition                           $      -    $ 50,517    $ 50,517    $      -    $      -
                                                                ========    ========    ========    ========    ========
    Deposit for acquisition of West Essex                       $      -    $(67,853)   $(67,853)   $      -    $      -
                                                                ========    ========    ========    ========    ========


                                     F - 46



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



19.  STOCK OFFERING
-------------------

On June 7, 2004,  the Board of  Directors  of the Company and the Bank adopted a
plan of stock  issuance  pursuant  to which the Company  will sell common  stock
representing a minority ownership of the estimated pro forma market value of the
Company  which will be  determined  by an  independent  appraisal,  to  eligible
depositors of the Bank in a  subscription  offering  and, if  necessary,  to the
general public of the community and/or in a syndicated offering. The majority of
the common stock will be owned by Kearny MHC, (a mutual  holding  company).  The
plan is subject to approval of the Office of Thrift Supervision.

Following  the sale of  commons  tock,  all  depositors  who had  membership  or
liquidation  rights  with  respect to the Bank as of the  effective  date of the
transaction  will continue to have such rights solely with respect to the Mutual
Holding  Company as along as they  continue to hold  deposit  accounts  with the
Bank. In addition,  all persons who become  depositors of the Bank subsequent to
the date of the transaction  will have such  membership and  liquidation  rights
with respect to the holding company. Borrowers of the Bank as of the date of the
transaction  will have the same  membership  rights in the holding  company that
they had in the Bank immediately prior to the date of the transaction as long as
their existing borrowings remain outstanding.

Cost incurred in  connection  with the offering will be recorded as reduction of
the proceeds from  offering.  If the  transaction is not  consummated,  all cost
incurred in connection with the transaction  will be expensed.  At September 30,
2004  (unaudited)  and June 30,  2004,  approximately  $454,000  and  $88,000 in
conversion costs have been incurred and are included in other assets.



20.  RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
-------------------------------------

In December 2002, the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board (the "FASB") issued
Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No. 148,  "Accounting for
Stock-Based  Compensation  -  Transition  and  Disclosure - an amendment of FASB
Statement No. 123." This statement  provides  alternative  methods of transition
for a  voluntary  change  to the fair  value  based  method  of  accounting  for
stock-based  employee  compensation.  In  addition,  this  statement  amends the
disclosure requirements of SFAS No. 123 to require prominent disclosures in both
annual and  interim  financial  statements  about the method of  accounting  for
stock-based employee compensation and the effects of the method used on reported
results.

On March 31, 2004, the FASB published an Exposure Draft,  "Share-Based Payment",
an Amendment of FASB Statements No. 123 and 95 (the "Exposure Draft").  The FASB
is  proposing,  among other  things,  amendments  to SFAS No. 123 and thus,  the
manner  in  which  share-based  compensation,  such as  stock  options,  will be
accounted for by both public and non-public companies. For public companies, the
cost of employee services received in exchange for equity instruments  including
options and restricted stock awards generally would be measured at fair value at
the  grant  date.   The   grant-date   fair  value  would  be  estimated   using
option-pricing  models adjusted for the unique  characteristics of those options
and instruments, unless observable market prices for the same or similar options
are available.  The cost would be recognized over the requisite  service period,
often the vesting period. The cost of employee services received in exchange for
liabilities  would be  measured  initially  at the fair  value,  rather than the
previously  allowed  intrinsic  value under APB Opinion No. 25,  Accounting  for
Stock  Issued  to  Employees,   of  the  liabilities  and  would  be  remeasured
subsequently at each reporting date through settlement date.

                                     F - 47



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------


20.  RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS (Cont'd.)
---------------------------------------------

The proposed  changes in accounting would replace  existing  requirements  under
SFAS No. 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation", and would eliminate the
ability to account for share-based  compensation  transactions using APB Opinion
No. 25, which did not require  companies to expense options.  Under the terms of
the Exposure Draft, the accounting for similar  transactions  involving  parties
other than employees or the accounting for employee stock  ownership  plans that
are subject to American  Institute of  Certified  Public  Accountants  ("AICPA")
Statement of Position 93-6,  "Employers' Accounting for Employee Stock Ownership
Plans", would remain unchanged.

The Exposure  Draft  provides  that the proposed  statement  would be applied to
public  entities  prospectively  for fiscal years  beginning  after December 15,
2004, as if all share-based compensation awards vesting,  granted,  modified, or
settled  after  December  15,  1994  had  been  accounted  for  using  the  fair
value-based  method  of  accounting.  The  FASB is  soliciting  comments  on the
Exposure  Draft  and is  expected  to issue the final  statement  in the  fourth
quarter of 2004.

The aforementioned  pronouncements  related to stock-based  compensation have no
effect on the Company's  historical  financial statements as the Company has not
issued  any  stock-based  compensation.  The  management  has not  completed  an
analysis of the  potential  effects of this  statement  on our future  financial
statements.  However,  the  Company  intends to account  for future  stock-based
compensation  using the  intrinsic  value  method  under  APB  Opinion  No.  25,
providing  such method is  permitted  at the time  stock-based  compensation  is
granted.

In April 2003,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 149,  "Amendment  of  Statement  133 on
Derivative  Instruments  and  Hedging  Activities."  This  statement  amends and
clarifies  accounting for derivative  instruments,  including certain derivative
instruments  embedded in other contracts,  and for hedging activities under SFAS
No. 133. The amendments set forth in SFAS No. 149 improve financial reporting by
requiring  that  contracts  with  comparable  characteristics  be accounted  for
similarly.  In particular,  this statement  clarifies under what circumstances a
contract with an initial net investment meets the characteristic of a derivative
as  discussed  in SFAS No. 133. In  addition,  it  clarifies  when a  derivative
contains a financing  component that warrants special reporting in the statement
of cash flows. SFAS No. 149 amends certain other existing pronouncements.  Those
changes  will  result  in  more  consistent  reporting  of  contracts  that  are
derivatives in their entirety or that contain embedded  derivatives that warrant
separate  accounting.  This statement is effective for contracts entered into or
modified  after  September 30, 2003,  and for hedging  relationships  designated
after  September 30, 2003.  The guidance  should be applied  prospectively.  The
provisions  of this  statement  that  relate  to SFAS No.  133,  "Implementation
Issues,"  that have been  effective  for fiscal  quarters  that  began  prior to
September  15,  2003,  should  continue to be applied in  accordance  with their
respective effective dates. In addition,  certain provisions relating to forward
purchases or sales of when-issued securities or other securities that do not yet
exist should be applied to existing  contracts as well as new contracts  entered
into after  September  30, 2003.  The adoption of this  statement did not have a
material effect on the Company's financial position or results of operations.

                                     F - 48



                     KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   ------------------------------------------



20.  RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS (Cont'd.)
---------------------------------------------

In May 2003,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 150,  "Accounting  for Certain  Financial
Instruments with Characteristics of Both Liabilities and Equity." This statement
establishes  standards  for  how  an  issuer  classifies  and  measures  certain
financial  instruments with  characteristics  of both liabilities and equity. It
requires that an issuer classify a financial instrument that is within its scope
as a liability (or an asset in some  circumstances).  Such  instruments may have
been previously  classified as equity. This statement is effective for financial
instruments  entered  into or modified  after May 31,  2003,  and  otherwise  is
effective at the beginning of the first interim period beginning after September
15, 2003. The adoption of this  statement did not have a material  effect on the
Company's financial position.

In November 2002, the FASB issued Interpretation No. 45, "Guarantor's Accounting
and Disclosure  Requirements for Guarantees,  Including  Indirect  Guarantees of
Indebtedness of Others." This interpretation elaborates on the disclosures to be
made by a guarantor  in its interim and annual  financial  statements  about its
obligations  under certain  guarantees that it has issued.  This  interpretation
clarifies that a guarantor is required to disclose: the nature of the guarantee,
including the approximate  term of the guarantee,  how the guarantee  arose, and
the events or  circumstances  that would  require the guarantor to perform under
the  guarantee;  the  maximum  potential  amount  of future  payments  under the
guarantee;  the carrying  amount of the liability,  if any, for the  guarantor's
obligations  under the  guarantee;  and the nature  and  extent of any  recourse
provisions  or available  collateral  that would enable the guarantor to recover
the amounts paid under the guarantee.  This interpretation also clarifies that a
guarantor is required to recognize, at the inception of a guarantee, a liability
for the  obligations it has  undertaken in issuing the guarantee,  including its
ongoing  obligation  to stand ready to perform over the term of the guarantee in
the  event  that the  specified  triggering  events  or  conditions  occur.  The
objective of the initial  measurement of that liability is the fair value of the
guarantee at its  inception.  The initial  recognition  and initial  measurement
provisions of this  interpretation  are  applicable  on a  prospective  basis to
guarantees  issued or modified  after  December  31, 2002,  irrespective  of the
guarantor's fiscal year-end. The disclosure  requirements in this interpretation
are effective for financial statements of interim or annual periods ending after
December 15, 2002. The adoption of this  interpretation  did not have a material
effect on Company's financial position or results of operations.

In  December   2003,   the  FASB  issued  a  revision  to   Interpretation   46,
"Consolidation of Variable Interest  Entities," which established  standards for
identifying a variable  interest entity ("VIE") and for  determining  under what
circumstances  a VIE  should  be  consolidated  with  its  primary  beneficiary.
Application of this Interpretation is required in financial statements of public
entities  that have  interests in  special-purpose  entities for periods  ending
after  December  15,  2003.  Application  by public  entities,  other than small
business  issuers,  for  all  other  types  of  VIEs is  required  in  financial
statements for periods ending after March 15, 2004.  Small business issuers must
apply  this  Interpretation  to all other  types of VIEs at the end of the first
reporting   period  ending  after  December  15,  2004.  The  adoption  of  this
Interpretation  has  not  and is not  expected  to  have a  material  effect  on
Company's financial position or results of operations.

                                     F - 49



You should rely only on the information  contained in this document. We have not
authorized  anyone to  provide  you with  information  that is  different.  This
document does not constitute an offer to sell, or the  solicitation  of an offer
to buy, any of the securities  offered hereby to any person in any  jurisdiction
in which the offer or  solicitation  would be  unlawful.  The  affairs of Kearny
Financial  Corp.  and  its  subsidiaries  may  change  after  the  date  of this
prospectus.  Delivery of this  document  and the sales of shares made  hereunder
does not mean otherwise.








                             KEARNY FINANCIAL CORP.
                 Holding Company for Kearny Federal Savings Bank



                     Up to 18,975,000 Shares of Common Stock
                (subject to increase to up to 21,821,250 shares)




                        --------------------------------

                                   PROSPECTUS

                        --------------------------------






                        Sandler O'Neill & Partners, L.P.





                                December 28, 2004





Until the later of  February  1,  2005,  or 25 days  after  commencement  of the
offering, all dealers effecting transactions in these securities, whether or not
participating in this offering, may be required to deliver a prospectus. This is
in addition to the dealers'  obligation  to deliver a prospectus  when acting as
underwriters and with respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.