As Schwab shares show weakness, let's find out whether this is the right time to add it to your portfolio.
TD Bank's full exit from its 10.1% stake in Schwab removes a significant sentiment overhang, refocusing investor attention on SCHW's strengthening fundamentals. Schwab's January metrics show strong organic growth, with $30 billion in net new assets and 7.3 million daily average trades, exceeding analyst estimates. Analysts project ~30% annual EPS growth for 2025 and 2026, driven by net interest margin expansion, operating margin growth, and substantial share repurchases.
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Charles Schwab's current price of $79 presents a compelling long-term investment opportunity, driven by its massive client assets, adaptable business model, and operating efficiency. Market concerns about net interest margin compression and regulatory uncertainty are short-term issues; Schwab's long-term asset growth and Ameritrade integration offer substantial upside. Management's confidence, proactive strategies, and strong expense controls indicate Schwab's resilience, with liquidity concerns being overblown and temporary.
SCHW's January core net new assets increase on the back of a rise in new brokerage accounts and total client assets.
Does The Charles Schwab Corporation (SCHW) have what it takes to be a top stock pick for momentum investors? Let's find out.
The Toronto-Dominion Bank agrees to sell its 10.1% stake in Schwab to pursue strategic review plans. The deal is expected to be accretive to the bank's earnings.
Even after buying the $1.5 billion in stock, Schwab will still have $7.2 billion remaining under its existing stock-buyback program.
Currently, TD Bank holds 184.7 million shares of the brokerage giant's common stock.
Charles Schwab (SCHW) shares have started gaining and might continue moving higher in the near term, as indicated by solid earnings estimate revisions.
Charles Schwab reported solid Q4 earnings, driven by high net interest margins, strong customer acquisition, and significant new asset inflows. The brokerage beat Q4 estimates, with non-GAAP earnings and net revenue exceeding predictions. Charles Schwab attracted $115B in core net new assets in Q4 and continued to post high ROEs of 36%.
Charles Schwab CEO Rick Wurster explains why now is a good time to be a fixed-income investor.