Commercial Banking
•369 stocks
•
Total Market Cap: Loading...
Price Performance Heatmap
5Y Price (Market Cap Weighted)
All Stocks (369)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
BVFL
BV Financial, Inc.
Core banking activities include deposits and loans to businesses and individuals, matching 'Commercial Banking'.
|
$183.38M |
$18.48
+0.76%
|
|
FNRN
First Northern Community Bancorp
The company directly provides core commercial banking services, including deposits and loan origination.
|
$183.22M |
$13.39
|
|
MRBK
Meridian Corporation
Meridian operates as a regional commercial bank offering deposit-taking, lending, and related services.
|
$180.93M |
$16.02
-0.40%
|
|
PEBK
Peoples Bancorp of North Carolina, Inc.
Core commercial banking services to businesses are a primary revenue driver for PEBK.
|
$178.09M |
$32.81
+1.77%
|
|
CBFV
CB Financial Services, Inc.
Core offering includes commercial banking services for businesses (deposits, lending, liquidity management).
|
$174.00M |
$34.77
-0.97%
|
|
UBFO
United Security Bancshares
Core service: UBFO provides commercial banking services including deposits, loans, and cash management for businesses and individuals.
|
$173.02M |
$9.92
|
|
CZWI
Citizens Community Bancorp, Inc.
CZWI operates as a commercial bank providing deposit, loan, and cash-management services to businesses and consumers.
|
$169.87M |
$17.38
+1.05%
|
|
LARK
Landmark Bancorp, Inc.
Landmark Bancorp provides core commercial banking services (deposits, loans, cash management) through its Landmark National Bank.
|
$168.53M |
$29.34
+0.88%
|
|
FCAP
First Capital, Inc.
Core deposits and lending services are the bank’s primary offerings, aligning with Commercial Banking.
|
$165.74M |
$49.16
-1.49%
|
|
INBK
First Internet Bancorp
Direct commercial banking services (deposits, loans, cash management) are INBK's core business.
|
$165.64M |
$19.06
-0.05%
|
|
FNWD
Finward Bancorp
Core banking activities include lending, deposits, and cash-management services.
|
$164.35M |
$37.89
+1.85%
|
|
HNVR
Hanover Bancorp, Inc.
Hanover Bancorp operates as a community bank providing core commercial banking services including loans, deposits, and cash-management.
|
$161.98M |
$22.52
+0.07%
|
|
CFBK
CF Bankshares Inc.
CFBK provides core commercial banking services including deposits, loans, and cash management.
|
$153.97M |
$23.92
-0.29%
|
|
ECBK
ECB Bancorp, Inc.
ECB Bancorp's core business is banking services including deposits, lending, and cash management, i.e., Commercial Banking.
|
$153.74M |
$17.34
-0.32%
|
|
MNSB
MainStreet Bancshares, Inc.
Core commercial banking operations with a focus on deposits, lending (including C&I and CRE) in the DC metro area.
|
$150.11M |
$19.51
+0.41%
|
|
BFIN
BankFinancial Corporation
Directly provides commercial banking services including deposits, loans, and cash-management for businesses.
|
$147.04M |
$11.79
-0.97%
|
|
RMBI
Richmond Mutual Bancorporation, Inc.
Commercial banking services (deposits, loans, cash management) are RMBI's core activities as a community/regional bank.
|
$141.48M |
$13.63
-0.87%
|
|
BCBP
BCB Bancorp, Inc.
BCBP operates as a regional bank delivering commercial banking services; this is the core business.
|
$137.55M |
$8.00
-0.74%
|
|
SBFG
SB Financial Group, Inc.
Commercial Banking represents SBFG's primary banking services including deposits and loans for businesses.
|
$136.87M |
$21.64
+0.67%
|
|
CSBB
CSB Bancorp, Inc.
CSBB directly provides commercial banking services as a core business line (deposits, loans, cash management).
|
$135.06M |
$49.00
|
|
SRBK
SR Bancorp, Inc. Common stock
Commercial Banking: SRBK's focus on serving businesses with commercial lending and related banking services.
|
$134.18M |
$15.40
+0.79%
|
|
PNBK
Patriot National Bancorp, Inc.
Core banking operations including deposits, loans, and cash management fall under Commercial Banking.
|
$134.12M |
$1.38
-0.36%
|
|
EBMT
Eagle Bancorp Montana, Inc.
EBMT provides core commercial banking services including deposits and commercial lending.
|
$132.09M |
$16.61
-0.84%
|
|
EMYB
Embassy Bancorp, Inc.
Embassy Bancorp provides traditional commercial banking services, including deposits, loans, and cash management.
|
$131.92M |
$17.65
|
|
CMTV
Community Bancorp
Commercial Banking; provides services to businesses including loans and cash management.
|
$125.32M |
$23.25
|
|
QNBC
QNB Corp.
QNBC describes core operations as a full suite of commercial and retail banking services, i.e., Commercial Banking.
|
$125.16M |
$35.20
|
|
AFBI
Affinity Bancshares, Inc.
Core product: commercial banking services including loans and deposits.
|
$124.28M |
$19.80
+3.23%
|
|
ENBP
ENB Financial Corp
Direct core business: providing commercial banking services including deposits and loan origination.
|
$123.60M |
$22.00
|
|
RBKB
Rhinebeck Bancorp, Inc.
Provides a full suite of banking services to consumers and commercial clients, i.e., commercial banking.
|
$122.60M |
$11.05
+2.13%
|
|
SFBC
Sound Financial Bancorp, Inc.
Commercial banking services spanning deposits, lending, and cash-management for businesses.
|
$113.50M |
$44.21
-0.79%
|
|
LSBK
Lake Shore Bancorp, Inc.
Core activities include commercial banking services such as deposits, lending, and cash management.
|
$112.14M |
$14.35
+0.21%
|
|
RVSB
Riverview Bancorp, Inc.
Provides commercial banking services (deposits, lending, cash management) to businesses and individuals.
|
$109.98M |
$5.25
-0.19%
|
|
BSBK
Bogota Financial Corp.
Commercial banking operations serving retail and commercial customers.
|
$109.27M |
$8.45
-1.57%
|
|
MGYR
Magyar Bancorp, Inc.
Magyar Bancorp delivers traditional commercial banking services (deposits, lending, cash management) to individuals and businesses, aligning with the core Commercial Banking business.
|
$108.39M |
$17.00
|
|
FKYS
First Keystone Corporation
Core commercial banking services including deposits and business/consumer lending.
|
$104.00M |
$16.60
|
|
PFBX
Peoples Financial Corporation
Provides commercial banking services including deposits, cash management, and lending.
|
$103.75M |
$20.25
|
|
UNB
Union Bankshares, Inc.
UNB's core business is providing commercial banking services including deposits, lending, and cash management to businesses and individuals.
|
$103.13M |
$22.73
-1.56%
|
|
SFDL
Security Federal Corporation
Direct core banking service: commercial banking activities including deposits and loans are the primary offering described.
|
$102.47M |
$31.37
|
|
PROV
Provident Financial Holdings, Inc.
Commercial Banking represents PROV's core banking operations serving business customers with deposits and loans.
|
$100.37M |
$15.39
+1.16%
|
|
CFSB
CFSB Bancorp, Inc.
Core banking operations include deposit-taking and lending to individuals and businesses, characteristic of Commercial Banking.
|
$93.32M |
$14.24
-0.07%
|
|
FNWB
First Northwest Bancorp
FNWB provides commercial banking services (deposits, loans, cash management).
|
$91.59M |
$9.85
|
|
WSBK
Winchester Bancorp, Inc. Common Stock
The company is a bank providing commercial banking services, including loans and deposits.
|
$88.86M |
$9.56
-0.21%
|
|
PBHC
Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc.
Commercial Banking is the primary service Pathfinder Bank provides (deposits, loans, cash management).
|
$87.90M |
$14.00
+1.23%
|
|
IROQ
IF Bancorp, Inc.
Commercial banking covers the bank's core depository and lending services to businesses.
|
$87.31M |
$26.12
-0.48%
|
|
FMBM
F & M Bank Corp.
Commercial banking is a core service, including deposits and lending to businesses and individuals.
|
$86.44M |
$26.54
|
|
AUBN
Auburn National Bancorporation, Inc.
AUBN's core business is providing traditional banking services (deposits, loans) through AuburnBank, i.e., commercial banking.
|
$84.27M |
$24.65
-1.36%
|
|
FUSB
First US Bancshares, Inc.
Direct commercial banking services including deposits, loans, and cash management are core to FUSB's business.
|
$77.81M |
$13.59
-0.07%
|
|
BOTJ
Bank of the James Financial Group, Inc.
Core banking activities include deposits and lending to commercial clients, which maps to Commercial Banking.
|
$77.28M |
$17.48
+0.43%
|
|
UBCP
United Bancorp, Inc.
The company operates as a regional commercial bank delivering deposit-taking and lending to businesses and individuals.
|
$76.79M |
$13.40
+0.22%
|
|
FDSB
Fifth District Savings Bank
Fifth District Bancorp functions as a community bank providing deposits, loans, and cash-management services to local businesses and individuals, i.e., core commercial banking activities.
|
$76.28M |
$13.74
+0.92%
|
|
NWPP
New Peoples Bankshares, Inc.
Provides commercial banking services including deposits and loans.
|
$74.57M |
$3.40
|
|
FGBI
First Guaranty Bancshares, Inc.
Core business is commercial banking, including deposits, lending, and treasury services.
|
$72.58M |
$4.91
-0.71%
|
|
JUVF
Juniata Valley Financial Corp.
Core banking operations include deposits, loans, and cash-management services to individuals and businesses.
|
$70.44M |
$14.07
|
|
CBKM
Consumers Bancorp, Inc.
Core business is providing commercial banking products and services (deposit taking, lending, cash management) to businesses and individuals.
|
$69.65M |
$23.65
|
|
CLST
Catalyst Bancorp, Inc.
Catalyst Bancorp operates as a community bank delivering core commercial banking services to small- to mid-sized businesses, including lending and deposits.
|
$62.16M |
$15.03
-0.07%
|
|
FSEA
First Seacoast Bancorp
Commercial Banking is the core service First Seacoast Bancorp provides to businesses and individuals.
|
$59.30M |
$12.75
+6.69%
|
|
NSTS
NSTS Bancorp, Inc.
NSTS Bancorp directly provides core commercial banking services (deposits, loans, cash management) as a community bank.
|
$58.42M |
$11.13
-0.71%
|
|
BYFC
Broadway Financial Corporation
Commercial Banking is the core service, including deposits and business lending.
|
$58.01M |
$6.52
+7.50%
|
|
PBBK
PB Bankshares, Inc.
PB Bankshares operates as a community/regional bank delivering commercial banking services, including loans and deposits.
|
$55.44M |
$21.41
+1.59%
|
|
ASRV
AmeriServ Financial, Inc.
Provides retail and commercial banking services including deposits and loans.
|
$51.04M |
$3.13
-1.88%
|
|
FMFG
Farmers and Merchants Bancshares, Inc.
FMFG provides core commercial banking services including lending and deposit taking.
|
$50.80M |
$16.87
|
|
OPHC
OptimumBank Holdings, Inc.
OPHC operates as a community bank offering core deposit, lending, and cash-management services to individuals and businesses.
|
$49.12M |
$4.20
+0.60%
|
|
TCBS
Texas Community Bancshares, Inc.
TCBS provides commercial banking services including deposits and loan originations to commercial and consumer customers.
|
$47.17M |
N/A
|
|
GOVB
Gouverneur Bancorp, Inc.
Core commercial banking operations (business deposits and lending).
|
$37.36M |
$16.00
|
|
BAFN
BayFirst Financial Corp.
Core business includes deposit gathering, lending, and cash-management for businesses and individuals, i.e., Commercial Banking.
|
$32.66M |
$8.00
|
|
QNTO
Quaint Oak Bancorp, Inc.
Core commercial banking operations including lending, deposits, and fee-based activities.
|
$26.62M |
$10.32
|
|
GLBZ
Glen Burnie Bancorp
GLBZ provides direct banking services (deposits, loans) through The Bank of Glen Burnie, i.e., core commercial and retail banking operations.
|
$12.53M |
$4.45
-1.11%
|
|
CARV
Carver Bancorp, Inc.
Carver Bancorp directly provides commercial banking services (deposits, loans, cash management) to businesses and individuals.
|
$8.33M |
$1.67
+7.74%
|
|
SHFS
SHF Holdings, Inc.
Commercial Banking capability, reflecting the integrated financial services model for business clients.
|
$4.17M |
$1.45
+7.04%
|
Showing page 4 of 4 (369 total stocks)
Loading company comparison...
Loading industry trends...
# Executive Summary
* The commercial banking industry faces a pivotal moment as shifting interest rate environments create significant divergence in core profitability, directly impacting Net Interest Income.
* Simultaneously, heightened regulatory scrutiny is imposing material costs, with multi-billion dollar fines and provisions for consumer redress and anti-money laundering (AML) failings pressuring bottom lines.
* Technology, particularly AI and embedded finance, is no longer optional but a key driver of competitive differentiation, separating leaders who are gaining efficiency and market share from laggards.
* Financial performance is bifurcating, with diversified North American banks showing robust growth while others navigate regional headwinds and regulatory charges.
* Strategic focus is on simplifying business models, divesting non-core assets, and reallocating capital towards technology and shareholder returns through aggressive buyback programs.
* The competitive landscape is defined by a split between globally diversified scale players and digitally-focused regional champions who are leveraging technology to win in high-growth markets.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The primary factor shaping the commercial banking outlook is the volatile macroeconomic environment and its direct impact on interest rate-sensitive revenues. Recent central bank rate cuts have begun to compress net interest margins, as seen with Bank of America and Wells Fargo lowering prime lending rates in September and October 2025, respectively, following a Federal Reserve rate cut to 3.75%-4.00%. This directly pressures Net Interest Income (NII), the core revenue driver, creating a clear divergence in performance. Some banks, like Wells Fargo, have seen NII decrease by 6% year-over-year in Q1 2025 due to lower interest rates on floating rate assets and deposit margin compression. In contrast, PNC reported a 2% linked-quarter increase in NII in Q2 2025, fueled by loan growth and fixed-rate asset repricing, and NatWest Group projects 2025 product hedge income to be £1 billion higher than 2024, providing a significant tailwind. Simultaneously, macroeconomic uncertainty is leading to a normalization in credit quality, forcing banks like JPMorgan Chase to increase provisions for credit losses to $3.3 billion in Q1 2025, predominantly concentrated in Card Services, consistent with the expected seasoning of newer loan vintages.
Layered on top of macro pressures, escalating regulatory scrutiny is imposing substantial costs. Banks are facing multi-billion dollar impacts from specific issues, such as the UK motor finance mis-selling scandal that erased over a third of Lloyds Banking Group's Q3 2025 profit due to an additional £800 million charge, bringing the total estimated impact to £1.95 billion. JPMorgan SE was also fined €45 million by Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) on November 6, 2025, for failing to file timely suspicious activity reports. In this challenging environment, technology has become the key differentiator; leaders like BBVA are leveraging superior digital platforms to acquire 66% of new customers digitally in 2024, driving best-in-class efficiency and growth with mobile penetration surging to 75%.
The most significant opportunity lies in leveraging technology, specifically AI and embedded finance, to create new revenue streams and achieve step-changes in operational efficiency, as demonstrated by Bank of America's launch of Ask Global Payments Solutions (AskGPS) on October 1, 2025, a generative AI platform for its Global Payments Solutions team. The primary risk is a severe macroeconomic downturn that accelerates credit losses far beyond current expectations, coupled with the constant threat of a major regulatory fine that can materially impair capital.
## Competitive Landscape
The global commercial banking market is forecast to grow at a 9.1% Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) to reach $16.8 trillion by 2029. The industry, while global, is seeing competition defined by distinct strategic approaches rather than a monolithic structure.
Globally diversified institutions leverage scale and a universal service model, providing a comprehensive suite of services—spanning retail, commercial, investment banking, and wealth management—to multinational corporations and institutional clients across all major global markets. This diversified revenue stream provides resilience against regional downturns, and the ability to service complex, cross-border needs creates a significant competitive moat and cross-selling opportunities. However, this model entails extreme operational and regulatory complexity, making these institutions a primary target for global regulators and potentially slower to pivot and innovate compared to more focused players. HSBC exemplifies this model, consistently ranked as the world's number one trade bank for seven to eight consecutive years, with a strategic pivot to focus on high-growth Asian and Middle Eastern trade corridors while divesting from less strategic markets.
In contrast, digitally-focused champions dominate specific high-growth regions by prioritizing technological innovation and a superior digital customer experience to rapidly gain market share. This strategy offers industry-leading efficiency, faster customer acquisition, and the ability to scale quickly without a large physical footprint. However, geographic concentration risk makes them more vulnerable to a downturn in their core markets. BBVA's dominant position in Mexico, driven by a mobile penetration rate of 75% and 66% of new customers joining through digital channels in 2024, is a prime example of this strategy delivering superior growth and profitability.
Finally, domestic market leaders focus on deep penetration and brand loyalty, leveraging a strong brand, extensive physical distribution network, and deep integration into the domestic economy to maintain a leading market share in core retail and commercial banking products. This approach yields a stable, low-cost deposit base, strong customer loyalty, and significant pricing power in core products. However, growth is limited to the pace of the domestic economy, and these banks are highly exposed to country-specific regulatory actions and economic shocks. Lloyds Banking Group, as the UK's largest mortgage lender, demonstrates this model, with its performance intrinsically tied to the health of the UK housing market and the actions of UK regulators, as seen with the motor finance issue. The key competitive battlegrounds are in the digital arena for customer acquisition and in navigating complex global versus local regulatory environments.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth is bifurcating significantly across the industry, with top performers achieving robust double-digit growth while others experience more modest increases or even declines. This divergence is driven by exposure to different macroeconomic environments and the strength of fee-generating businesses. Growth leaders are benefiting from strong performance in capital markets and wealth management, or from operating in higher-growth economies, while others are more exposed to the margin pressures from interest rate shifts in mature markets. Royal Bank of Canada's +16% year-over-year revenue growth to C$16.985 billion in Q3 2025, alongside a record C$3.8 billion in Capital Markets revenue, exemplifies the success of a diversified model with strong fee-based income in the current environment.
{{chart_0}}
Profitability metrics like Return on Tangible Equity (ROTE) and efficiency ratios are diverging, heavily influenced by regulatory costs and operational efficiency. ROTE ranges from over 20% for highly efficient players to low double-digits for those facing headwinds. Efficiency ratios show a wide spread from the high 30s to over 60%. Margin divergence is a direct result of the material factors impacting the industry. On one hand, technology leaders are driving down their cost-to-income ratios. On the other hand, banks like Lloyds Banking Group are seeing profitability directly impaired by massive, one-time regulatory provisions, with an £800 million charge for the UK motor finance mis-selling scandal contributing to a 36% drop in Q3 2025 profit. The most profitable banks, like BBVA, combine high-growth market exposure with best-in-class digital efficiency, reporting an industry-leading 37.6% efficiency ratio and a ROTE of 20.4% in H1 2025.
{{chart_1}}
The dominant themes in capital allocation are a decisive shift towards simplifying the business and returning significant capital to shareholders. Having navigated the post-2008 regulatory build-up and recent macroeconomic uncertainty, many banks now find themselves with strong capital positions. This allows them to strategically divest non-core or low-return businesses and redirect the proceeds and excess capital into aggressive share buyback programs to boost EPS and shareholder returns. HSBC's strategy is the archetype of this trend, having divested multiple major international units while simultaneously executing multi-billion dollar buybacks, including a new $3 billion program announced for Q2 2025, contributing to total distributions of $9.5 billion for H1 2025.
{{chart_2}}
Balance sheets across the industry are generally robust and well-capitalized, a direct outcome of years of regulatory pressure. Banks maintain strong capital ratios (CET1) and liquidity coverage ratios (LCR) that are well above minimum requirements. They are actively managing their funding profiles, redeeming higher-cost debt and maintaining strong deposit franchises. JPMorgan Chase's ~$1.5 trillion in available cash and securities in Q1 2025, including $881 billion in eligible High Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) and $635 billion in unencumbered marketable securities, serves as a clear indicator of the fortress-like liquidity positions that top-tier banks have built.