Advertisement
U.S. markets closed

Capital One Financial Corporation (COF)

NYSE - NYSE Delayed Price. Currency in USD
148.89+4.38 (+3.03%)
At close: 04:00PM EDT
149.42 +0.53 (+0.36%)
After hours: 08:00PM EDT
Full screen
Trade prices are not sourced from all markets
Gain actionable insight from technical analysis on financial instruments, to help optimize your trading strategies
Chart Events
Bullishpattern detected
Commodity Channel Index

Commodity Channel Index

Previous Close144.51
Open145.60
Bid148.83 x 2200
Ask148.87 x 800
Day's Range145.00 - 149.27
52 Week Range83.93 - 149.28
Volume4,004,339
Avg. Volume2,804,329
Market Cap56.637B
Beta (5Y Monthly)1.48
PE Ratio (TTM)12.45
EPS (TTM)11.96
Earnings DateApr 25, 2024
Forward Dividend & Yield2.40 (1.61%)
Ex-Dividend DateFeb 09, 2024
1y Target Est143.20
Fair Value is the appropriate price for the shares of a company, based on its earnings and growth rate also interpreted as when P/E Ratio = Growth Rate. Estimated return represents the projected annual return you might expect after purchasing shares in the company and holding them over the default time horizon of 5 years, based on the EPS growth rate that we have projected.
Fair Value
XX.XX
Overvalued
-10% Est. Return

Subscribe to Yahoo Finance Plus to view Fair Value for COF

View details
Research that delivers an independent perspective, consistent methodology and actionable insight
Related Research
  • Capital One Financial Corporati
    Daily Spotlight: Progress on Inflation Proves ChallengingTwo recent inflation reports indicated that overall pricing pressures have retreated from peaks in 2022. But both also signaled that inflation remains above the Fed's target of 2.0%. According to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, the overall inflation rate in January of 3.2% was higher than the prior month's 3.1%. That sour news was offset a bit by a drop in the core CPI rate, which excludes food and energy and eased to 3.8% from 3.9%. Two main factors are propping up CPI: Transportation Services (+9.9% YOY) and Shelter (+5.7%). These categories have prices that don't fall sharply. The other inflation report was the Producer Price Index (PPI), which measures pricing trends farther up the supply chain, at the manufacturing level. Here, we also saw a modest pick-up. The core final demand PPI rate for February was 1.6%, up 60 basis points month-over-month after having fallen from 4.4% a year ago. We have noted for months that making progress on inflation will be hard -- and nothing was overly alarming about either of the reports. Energy prices remain relatively subdued and prices at the PPI Intermediate demand level -- farther up the value chain -- continue to decline. We think the June 2022 CPI rate was the peak reading for the index this cycle, as the housing market cools, supplies of new vehicles are replenished, and the price of oil stays around $90. The Fed lifted the feds fund rate from 0.0% to above 5.25% over the past 18 months, and the hikes appear to be reducing inflationary pressures. We look for the U.S. central bank to be lowering rates in 2H24 as their concern shifts more toward economic growth.
    Rating
    Fair Value
    Economic Moat
    11 days agoArgus Research
View more
  • Motley Fool

    Is Capital One Stock a Buy?

    The bank recently announced plans to acquire Discover Financial Services. Is now the time to buy?

  • Bloomberg

    Discover CEO Michael Rhodes Resigns to Become Ally’s Head

    (Bloomberg) -- Discover Financial Services Chief Executive Officer Michael Rhodes is leaving the credit-card company to become CEO of auto lender Ally Financial Inc.Most Read from BloombergLondon Insurers Face Baltimore Bridge Payouts Worth BillionsBiden Gains Ground Against Trump in Six Key States, Poll ShowsJapan Amps Up Intervention Threat as Yen Hits Lowest Since 1990Trump’s Net Worth Hits $6.5 Billion, Making Him One of World’s 500 Richest PeopleUsing Your Premium Credit Card May Cost More

  • Reuters

    US banks to see modest hit from deal to lower swipe fee by Visa, Mastercard

    U.S. banks could see a modest hit to their earnings due to the $30 billion settlement to limit credit and debit card fees for merchants by payments networks Visa and Mastercard, Wall Street analysts said. Swipe or interchange fees, paid by merchants, typically includes small fixed fees plus a percentage of total sale amounts, and averages about 1.5% to 3.5% per transaction, according to Bankrate.com. "On a preliminary basis, we estimate the impact at around 1%-2% of EPS before any mitigation efforts using retail card volumes, but interchange fees can vary significantly by transaction," J.P.Morgan said in a note.