Capital One

Capital One sits on $298 billion in managed loans, yet the base 18-month target is just $271, or 13% above today.

If you own Capital One, you own a giant lender priced like a normal bank.

cof

financials large cap updated jan 30, 2026
$239.14
market cap ~$152B · 52-week range $123–$250
xvary composite: 57 / 100 · below average
our overall rating — combines growth, value, risk, and momentum
Start here if you're new
what it is
Capital One makes money by lending you money on cards, cars, and bank products, then collecting interest and fees.
how it gets paid
Last year Capital One made $8.1B in revenue.
why it's growing
Revenue grew 36.3% last year. Quarterly EPS has climbed from $3.09 in 2024 Q4 to $4.51 in 2025 Q4.
what just happened
Capital One posted $3.86 EPS, ahead of the $3.51 estimate by 9.97%.
At a glance
A balance sheet — strong enough to weather a downturn
25/100 earnings predictability — expect surprises
12.0x trailing p/e — the market's not buying it — or you found a deal
1.3% dividend yield — cash in your pocket every quarter
8.0% return on capital — nothing to write home about
xvary composite: 57/100 — below average
What they do
Capital One makes money by lending you money on cards, cars, and bank products, then collecting interest and fees.
Capital One wins on scale. It had $298 billion in managed loans and $381 billion in assets as of 12/24. That scale lowers funding pressure and spreads costs across more accounts, which means your bank card and your deposits feed the same machine.
financials large-cap consumer-lending credit-cards discover-deal
How they make money
$8.1B annual revenue · their business grew +36.3% last year
total revenue
$8.1B
+36.3%
The products that matter
issues cards and extends consumer credit
Credit Cards and Consumer Lending
$8.1B reported revenue · +36.3%
this is the core engine in the snapshot data. $8.1B of revenue growing 36.3% tells you the balance sheet got bigger fast, even if the segment breakout underneath it is still thin.
core engine
adds payment rails and more balances
Discover Integration
Q4 est. $2.3B revenue · +58%
the latest quarter is estimated at $2.3B of revenue, up 58% from last year, and management linked that lift to higher loan balances plus discover's network showing up in results. bigger is obvious. better is what the next few quarters need to prove.
scale bet
co-brand customer acquisition
T-Mobile Visa
0 annual fee
the new t-mobile visa has no annual fee and gives capital one another distribution channel for card growth. by itself it does not move a $152B company, but it shows management is still feeding the top of the funnel.
distribution
Key numbers
$21.00
fy2026 eps
EPS estimate → expected yearly profit per share → so what: the baseline says profit per share rises 5% from $20.00 in FY2025, which keeps the stock at about 11.4x that number.
12.0x
trailing p/e
P/E → price divided by yearly profit → so what: you are paying 12 times earnings for a lender with 10% projected earnings growth.
14%
return on equity
Return on equity → profit made on shareholder money → so what: Capital One earns $14 for every $100 owners leave in the business.
$298B
managed loans
Managed loans → total loans the company earns from → so what: this is a huge earning base, and even small rate or loss changes move real money.
Financial health
A
strength
  • balance sheet grade A — very strong financial position
  • risk rank 3 — safer than 50% of stocks
  • price stability 50 / 100
  • return on equity 14% — $0.14 profit for every $1 investors have put in
A — among the top-rated companies for balance sheet quality.
Total return vs. market

You invested $10,000 in COF 3 years ago → it's now worth $24,500.

The index would have given you $14,770.

source: institutional data · total return
What just happened
beat estimates
Capital One posted $3.86 EPS, ahead of the $3.51 estimate by 9.97%.
Quarterly EPS has climbed from $3.09 in 2024 Q4 to $4.51 in 2025 Q4. Management also flagged higher loan balances from the Discover deal and stronger capital markets fees.
$5.6B
revenue
$3.86
eps
n/a
n/a
the number that mattered
The key number was the 9.97% EPS beat, because lenders get re-rated when earnings hold up better than credit fears.
source: company earnings report, 2026

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What could go wrong

the #1 risk is consumer credit deterioration inside a much larger post-discover loan book.

med
credit losses rise fast when unsecured lending turns
capital one lives in consumer credit, and unsecured credit is unforgiving when households crack. that is why a lender growing 36.3% can still trade at only 12.0x earnings.
impact: higher provisions hit earnings first, then the multiple. a 12% return on equity stops looking comfortable in a hurry.
med
discover integration has to improve quality, not just size
the latest quarter benefited from higher balances and discover's network showing up in results. if systems, underwriting, or cost control slip, investors will treat the acquisition boost as temporary arithmetic.
impact: revenue can stay large while earnings stay noisy. that is how a cheap stock stays cheap.
med
deposit funding gets less friendly
one reason net interest income improved was easing deposit costs. if that reverses while loan growth cools, the spread benefit that helped recent results shrinks from both sides.
impact: lower net interest income would make the $4.75 quarterly EPS run-rate look less durable than it does today.
med
card-fee and network regulation targets the profitable parts first
policy changes on card fees, payment networks, or lending standards do not need to break the model to hurt returns. they only need to trim economics in the parts investors expect to stay rich.
impact: weaker fee income and thinner spread capture would pressure a business already carrying just a 1.3% dividend yield.
the balance sheet is rated A, so this is not a survival call. it is a quality-of-earnings call. if credit stays contained and discover integrates cleanly, 12.0x can look too low. if either one breaks, the discount is the story.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
metric
watch whether $4.75 EPS starts to look repeatable
one strong quarter gets attention. two or three quarters near that level would tell you the earnings base is getting real.
trend
track growth after the acquisition boost laps itself
the latest quarter came in at $2.3B of revenue and 58% growth from last year. the pace matters less than what is left once discover is fully in the base.
risk
credit metrics will tell you first if the thesis is slipping
charge-offs, provisions, and delinquency trends matter more than partnership headlines. this is still a lender before it is anything else.
calendar
the next few earnings reports are integration audits
listen for updates on discover network progress, funding costs, and whether management still talks about high-single-digit revenue growth in 2026.
Analyst rankings
short-term outlook
below average
momentum score 4 — in human-speak, analysts think the next 6–12 months could be choppier than the recent run.
risk profile
average
stability score 3 — this is ordinary bank-stock risk, not low-risk utility risk and not biotech chaos either.
chart momentum
top 20%
technical score 2 — price action has been strong even while the fundamental debate stays open.
earnings predictability
25 / 100
earnings are harder to model here. that is what consumer credit and merger integration do to neat spreadsheets.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity

institutions have been net buying for 3 consecutive quarters — 959 buyers vs. 762 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 0.5B shares. net buying for 3 quarters.

source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$175 $367
$239 current price
$271 target midpoint · +13% from current · 3-5yr high: $530 (+120% · 22% ann'l return)
source: institutional data · analyst targets

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