Discover Financial Services (NYSE:DFS) Q1 2023 Earnings Call Transcript April 20, 2023
Discover Financial Services misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $3.58 EPS, expectations were $3.91.
Operator Good morning. My name is Chelsea, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the First Quarter 2023 Discover Financial Services Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you.I will now turn the call over to Mr. Eric Wasserstrom, Head of Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead.Eric Wasserstrom Thank you, Chelsea, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to this morning's call. I'll begin on slide two of our earnings presentation, which you can find in the financial section of our Investor Relations website, investorrelations.discover.com.Our discussion today contains certain forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially.
Please refer to our notices regarding forward-looking statements that appear in our first quarter earnings press release and presentation.Our call today will include remarks from our CEO, Roger Hochschild; and John Greene, our Chief Financial Officer. After we conclude our formal comments, there will be time for a question-and-answer session. During the Q&A session, you’ll be permitted to ask one question followed by one follow-up question. After your follow-up questions, please return to the queue.Now, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Roger.Roger Hochschild Thanks, Eric, and thanks to our listeners for joining today's call. I'll begin by commenting on some of the recent events in the banking industry, review our highlights for the quarter, and then John will take you through the details of our first quarter results and our updated perspectives on 2023.This past quarter include the failure of two large banks, an event that catalyzed more widespread stress in some segments of the banking system and raised questions about the funding models and embedded portfolio losses of multiple banks.In contrast, our strong results underscore how our model, with its diversified funding, trusted brand, focus on prime consumer lending and conservative risk management positions us to succeed through a range of operating conditions.I want to call out a few results in particular that highlight our performance in this challenging environment.
We reported first quarter net income of $1 billion or $3.58 per share. We had an all-time record quarter in terms of consumer deposit inflows, leveraging our award-winning digital experience and our leading customer service, and we're improving key elements of our guidance.As we look to the remainder of 2023, we may adjust our outlook as conditions evolve. We believe there is the potential for more stringent regulation. We believe we're well positioned for more rigorous regulatory capital and liquidity requirements given our strong internal standards, and we also continue to focus on enhancing our compliance management systems.This past quarter also included an important milestone with respect to our investment in human capital. We're honored to have been recognized as one of Fortune's 100 Best Companies to Work for in 2023.
This is the first time we've earned this distinction and it builds upon recognition we received last year, ranking us among the best workplaces for parents and Fortune's best workplaces for women.In conclusion, we believe our earnings power, balance sheet strength, investments in people and advancements and capabilities support our strategy of becoming the leading consumer digital bank.I'll now turn the call over to John to review our results in more detail.John Greene Thank you, Roger, and good morning, everyone. I'll start with our financial summary results on slide four. Our performance this quarter was characterized by strong revenue growth, continued credit normalization, a slight change to our outlook on the macroeconomic environment, resulting in a reserve increase, and a year-over-year increase in expenses.Let's review the details starting on slide five.
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Net interest income was up $653 million year-over-year or 26%. Our net interest margin continued to expand, benefiting from higher prime rates, partially offset by higher funding costs and increased promotional balances.NIM ended the quarter at 11.34%, up 49 basis points from the prior year and seven basis points sequentially. Receivable growth was driven by card, which increased 22% year-over-year, reflecting stable sales growth, modest new account growth, and payment rate moderation.Sales increased 9% in the period, slightly higher than the 8% growth we experienced in the prior quarter and down from the 16% growth we experienced in 2022. Sales growth so far in April is a modest 2.5% but this is coming off a very high comp of 22% in April of last year.New card account growth decelerated, reflecting the tightening of underwriting standards over the past several months, but grew by 3% from the prior year.
The impact of slowing sales growth on receivable expansion was offset by decreases in payment rates. The card payment rate decreased 80 basis points in the quarter and is currently slightly over 200 basis points above the pre-pandemic level.Turning to our non-card products. Personal loans were up 21%, driven by higher originations over the past year and lower payment rates. We continue to experience strong consumer demand, while staying disciplined in our underwriting of this product. Organic student loan receivables grew by 3%, largely driven by a reduction in the payment rate.In terms of funding mix, consumer deposit balances were up 17% year-over-year and 7% sequentially. As Roger highlighted, we achieved record quarterly deposit growth.
Deposits now make up 66% of our total funding mix with over 90% insured and we continue to target 70% to 80% deposit funding over the medium term.Outside of deposits, our funding channels remain open and at attractive costs. As an example, in early April, we issued $1.25 billion of card ABS fixed rate notes. This offering was upsized and our spread was nine basis points tighter than our November securitization.Additionally, we recently received a ratings upgrade by Moody's for our bank subsidiary and our banking holding company. Moody's cited a number of reasons to support this upgrade, including our prudent underwriting, conservative risk management, and resiliency in an economic downturn.Looking at other revenue on slide six. Non-interest income increased $198 million or 47%.
This was partially due to a $162 million loss on our equity investments in the prior year quarter compared to an $18 million loss this quarter. Adjusting for these, our non-interest income was up 9%, primarily driven by the loan fee income and higher net discount and interchange revenue.Moving to expenses on slide seven. Total operating expenses were up $253 million, or 22% year-over-year and down 7% from the prior quarter. Compensation costs were up primarily due to increased headcount and wage inflation. Marketing expenses increased $49 million, or 26% as we continue to prudently invest for growth in our card and consumer banking products.Professional fees increased $55 million, or 31%, driven by investments in technology and increases and consulting activities that support our consumer compliance initiatives.
Even with these increases, our efficiency ratio was 37%, and we generated about 700 basis points of operating leverage in the period.Moving to credit performance on Slide 8. Total net charge-offs were 2.72%, 111 basis points higher than the prior year and up 59 basis points from the prior quarter. In the card portfolio, the net charge-off rate of 3.1% was 126 basis points higher than the prior year and 73 basis points higher sequentially. Consistent with our commentary back in January, we expect the seasoning of new account vintages from the past two years and normalization of older vintages to a more typical loss rate. These trends remain consistent with our expectations.Turning to the discussion of our allowance on Slide 9. This quarter, we increased our allowance by $385 million, and our reserve rate increased by 25 basis points to 6.8%.
This increase in reserve rate was driven by two factors. About 10 basis points reflects the runoff of seasonal transactor balances that we typically experienced in the fourth quarter. The remaining portion was largely driven by deterioration in our expectations of the macroeconomic environment. We increased our expectations for the 2023 year-end employment rate to the midpoint of our 4.5% to 5% range. This change reflects the potential for a reduction in lending impacting economic growth. We will continue to monitor the macroeconomic conditions and make adjustments to our expectations.Looking at Slide 10. Our common equity Tier 1 for the period was 12.3%, and we repurchased $1.2 billion of common stock during the quarter. The net unrealized loss on our AFS securities portfolio at the end of the quarter was $45 million.
The impact on our regulatory capital, if our OCI opt-out were not allowed would have been about 20 basis points.Our capital position remains robust and well ahead of regulatory requirements. We continue to prioritize investment in strong organic growth and returning excess capital to shareholders. Included in our press release was the announcement that our Board of Directors approved a new $2.7 billion share repurchase program for the five quarters ending June 2024 and increased our common stock dividend by 17% to $0.70 per share.Including on Slide 11 with our outlook. Following the strong first quarter performance, we are raising our expectations for loan growth this year to be low to mid-teens. There is no change to our NIM forecast. We are maintaining our guidance for operating expenses to be less than 10%.
However, we do see risk of upward pressure on this from collection and customer service expense related to growth in our lending and deposit accounts and professional service support and continued investment in technology. We are targeting our expected range of net charge-offs to 3.5% to 3.8% based on our current delinquencies and roll rates. This represents a reduction to the top end of the range by 10 basis points.Finally, as mentioned, our Board of Directors approved a new share repurchase authorization. We have returned substantial excess capital over the past two years, and we anticipate moving towards a more standard cadence of share buybacks over the second half of this year. To conclude, our first quarter results have given us significant momentum into this year, and we're well positioned to deliver on our financial objectives.With that, I'll turn the call back to our operator to open the line for Q&A.
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Question-and-Answer Session Operator [Operator Instructions]
And we'll take our first question from Sanjay Sakhrani with KBW.
Your line is open.Sanjay Sakhrani Thank you. Good morning. John, quick question on the reserve commentary you had. Just to be clear, I know you guys had a weighting of scenarios. And it sounds like the low end went from 4.5% to 4.75%. When we average that out, between all the scenarios, does that take you above the 5% unemployment rate assumption, or how should we think about that? And also just in terms of the narrowing of the range of the charge-offs this quarter, was that more because the unemployment rate hasn't necessarily panned out the way you expected it to, meaning it's coming in better?John Greene Yes. Thanks, Sanjay. Yes, I'll start with the reserve portion of the question and then swing over to the charge-off aspect. So as we mentioned, we ran a number of different scenarios.
So we looked at unemployment ranges from 3.5% to north of 6%. We centered around a range between 4.5% and 5% for 2023 and then a slight improvement in 2024. And that was essentially the driver of the increase in the reserve rate outside of the 10 basis points I talked about in my prepared remarks related to kind of transactors running off as they typically do in the first quarter. So hopefully, that clarifies your question or clarify any questions you have on reserves.Related to charge-offs, so there's a couple of factors there. The first and what I would say is the most important is that the portfolio is performing almost exactly as we expected it to in terms of charge-off, roll rates and delinquencies. So we're generally pleased with that.As each month and quarter goes by, we have better line of sight to what we expect the total year to be.
Our internal kind of roll rate models basically can take a very, very good look at six months forward, and then we move to more advanced models for anything beyond that. So as the first quarter passed through great line of sight through September. And then beyond September, we've relied on our analytical models. So that's essentially the reason why we're able to tighten the charge-off guidance from the upper end. And each quarter, we'll give an update on that certainly.Sanjay Sakhrani Okay. Thank you.Operator Thank you. Our next question will come from Moshe Orenbuch with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.Moshe Orenbuch Great. Thanks. I guess, first, you talked about kind of slowing of new account growth. Could you kind of, Roger, perhaps drill down a little more into that the drivers, I guess, in terms of what you're seeing either in the competitive environment or in the consumer kind of credit environment?Roger Hochschild Yeah.
So I'll start the credit -- the competitive environment remains robust, right? Most of our key competitors in the card business are the larger money center banks, well capitalized, a lot of deposits. So card's tends to always be competitive. I think what you're seeing are the results of some of the changes we've made in credit policy. We've talked about tightening at the margin. And then also some very tough comps over the growth we saw last year. So we feel really good about the new accounts we're booking, but also believe our credit policy is appropriate for the current environment.Moshe Orenbuch Got it. And maybe can you talk, John, maybe talk a little bit more about the expense comment that you made, how much of that would be tied to revenue growth if expenses were higher.John Greene Yeah.
So as I said in the prepared remarks, we we've maintained a less than 10% guidance, although we're seeing a little bit of pressure on those lines I mentioned. So in terms of marketing, what we said in January was that we expected marketing to be up double digits. We still expect that to be the case despite the reduction in the rate of growth of new accounts, we are still seeing good opportunities to generate positive account growth with an appropriate risk tolerance.The other portion of that marketing spend will be to roll out the -- the cash back debit program, which we anticipate to be rolled out late in the second quarter, maybe early in the third quarter. So we're going to put some substantial dollars behind that to generate some activity, both new account generation as well as awareness of the product and the product features that we think will help build -- continue to build our strong deposit franchise.Operator Thank you.
Our next question will come from Bob Napoli with William Blair. Your line is open.Bob Napoli Yeah. Thank you, and good morning. The slowdown in spend growth that you called out in the month of April. I was wondering if you could give -- I know it's tough comps versus a year ago. But just any color on what you're seeing on that front? And then any change in your view of the health of the consumer?Roger Hochschild Yeah. So I would say that, the slowdown is pretty broad-based. And is really a continuation of the trend. If you look at the quarter itself, overall sales growth was a little over 9%. But March, it had dropped to 4%. So broad-based across all categories, I think some of it is just a reduction in the pressures from inflation. But also you've got some tough comps in terms of last April, sales were up 22% year-over-year.For us, the most important thing for the consumers, the strength of the job market, and that remains pretty robust.
So while we are tightening credit and continuing along that, overall, the consumer is still holding up pretty well.Bob Napoli Thank you. Then just any more color on the Cashback Debit product and what do you believe that will, I guess, do for you strategically? Just any thoughts on -- I know you guys have been doing a lot of work on it over the years, and it seems like you're ready to really roll with it.Roger Hochschild Yeah. No, that -- it's a product we're really excited about. Offering 1% cash back on debit transactions is virtually unique. It's something that no big bank can match. We take advantage of having a proprietary payments network. And one of the outcomes from the pandemic is consumers even for their primary checking or debit account are a lot more comfortable dealing with the direct bank.
So this is going to be a critical initiative, not just for this year, but for many years to come. And part of our transition to being way more than credit cards, first loans, student loans, home equity, but being the true leading digital bank.Bob Napoli Thank you.Operator Thank you. Our next question will come from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Your line is open.Rick Shane Thanks everybody for taking my questions this morning. Roger, when you look at the credit outlook and you updated the NCO guidance, I'm curious about some of the puts and takes you see in terms of the internals of numbers, whether it's roll rates, utilization, payment rates. What do you see out there that is the most constructive and what's your -- what's the factor that gives you the most pause?Roger Hochschild Yeah.
It varies for new accounts versus what we look for in our portfolio. For the portfolio side, yeah, it's hard to pick an individual factor given the complexity of the models we use. But certainly, overall levels of indebtedness, their behavior in terms of payments, the amount of payment, we even look at when a payment comes in during the month. So given that we're still focused on growth, I would say, in general, the consumers are doing well, but we have continued to tighten. And it's something we look at every account, every day across all of our different products.Rick Shane Got it. And is there one metric you might point to that kind of your -- when you get your daily reports, you scan to right away to -- because it's a concern for you?Roger Hochschild Yeah.
So you may find it hard to believe, but there are very few numbers I look at on a daily basis. I'm lucky to have an amazing team. And so I can look at it a little less frequently. But you can't point to a single number. We have a composite behavioral score that I see on a lot of our internal risk reporting. But again, there are literally countless variables in some of our most complex machine learning models that are evaluating portfolio credit.Rick Shane Got it. Okay. Thank you very much.Operator Thank you. Our next question will come from Betsy Graseck with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.Jeff Adelson Yes. Hi. This is Jeff Adelson on for Betsy. Good morning. John, I just wanted to follow up on the comment about the potential for a reduction in lending impacting economic growth.
I know that was more of a macro overlay comment, but just wanted to understand maybe where you think Discover is going to fit into that potential tightening regime?I know you're already doing some tightening, slowing account growth on your side, but just wondering, do you see yourself at some point this year taking a more meaningful cut, maybe what would cause you to revisit the loan growth that you're seeing today?John Greene Yes, thanks for the question, Jeff. So as we look at loan growth for 2023, we feel very, very positive, and that's why we moved the loan growth range up a bit. So in terms of the overall lending environment and what would trigger additional cuts, it would be meaningful changes to the unemployment outlook, meaningful changes in the number of job openings and then further signs of stress within the consumers.So that would -- within the portfolio itself, it would be payment rates, timing of payments.
We take a look at flow rates from one bucket to another. So those would all be certainly signs as well as kind of the broader indications of delinquency and the rate of charge-off on a vintage basis.But as we look at things right now, employment, I believe, will continue to be strong, right? So we have strong growth in the health care sector, manufacturing sector, defense, oil and gas, and onshoring of supply chain continues. So my sense is that we're not going to have any seismic changes to unemployment despite the fed tightening action.So that means that we'll look at -- continue to look at things around the margins and make good calls to ensure that the accounts we're putting on are profitable. And the accounts that are in the portfolio that we have early warning triggers, so that our customer service and collection folks can reach out to ensure that collections and cash flows remain strong.Jeff Adelson Thank you.
And one follow-up I just want to have on expenses and technology investment. There's been a lot of focus out there on AI and some advances in that technology. I know Discover has been pretty nimble and investing on its own in that space. But just wondering, is there anything -- John Greene Hello. Jeff or operator? Is the line open?Operator Yes. His line is still open. John Greene Okay.Eric Wasserstrom Jeff, I think we missed the last a little bit of your question, but I think it was essentially about the use of AI. So.John Greene Yes. So why don't I -- I'll take that briefly. And Jeff or Betsy, we can follow up separately in the afternoon, if you like. So in terms of investing in technology. So there's three -- there's, I'll call it, three or four different strengths.The first is to ensure we have leading-edge capabilities, which would include machine learning, AI.
Second is ensure that our core systems are robust and resilient. And third, around the network, making sure that our network continues to have leading edge or at a minimum market global capabilities.So, those are the tiers and we continue to invest in those aspects as well as technology to support our overall compliance management system as we talked about in the prepared remarks.So, overall, it's an area of investment. We're a digital institution. We need to continue to invest in technology to ensure that we keep capabilities, advancing.Jeff Adelson Okay. Thank you.Operator Thank you. Our next question will come from Dominick Gabriele with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.Dominick Gabriele Hey, thanks so much and good morning. I would imagine that Discover, given the prudence of the way you run your franchise has really strong KYC.
And I think some of the fintech players are actually having some difficulty there. And so I'd love to hear you talk about your checklist for opening an account. And is there a difference for KYC when you issue a debit card versus extending credit with the credit card? And I just have a follow-up. Thanks so much guys.Roger Hochschild Yes. Great question. So, AML BSA, KYC is one element of compliance. There are many others that we focus on. First thing I'd say is our task might be a little easier just given that we don't handle much cash, not having branches. We don't have huge private net worth operations, much outside the US. But it is a key area of focus, there's a pretty big overlap between what we're required to do from a KYC standpoint and actually what we do ourselves to tackle fraud.A huge amount of the new fraud attacks do come via identity theft.
And while there are sort of nuanced differences by product, very, very similar in terms of what we do when someone is opening a new credit card account versus opening a checking or a debit account.Dominick Gabriele Okay. Thanks. Thank you very much. And I guess, kind of a double question here. But is -- how closely aligned is your CECL unemployment rate and thus, reserve outlook correlated with your net charge-off guidance. Is there a possibility that, I mean, you had mentioned before that you don't expect unemployment rate to rise very much? Is there a chance that there could be actually a disconnect between the CECL reserve and company NCO outlooks? Thanks so much.John Greene Yes, thanks Dominick. So, yes, we have a process that we take great pains to make sure there's no disconnects between our outlook on kind of charge-offs over, call it, a three-quarter or four-quarter period and the CECL reserves, which is life of loan losses, which would include charge-offs through the life of the relationship.
And the modeling systems that we use are essentially the same. Same tools, same people kind of managing those and a bunch of work to ensure that the organization. So each of the functions, credit and risk management systems and finance and accounting are on the same page in terms of what we're trying to accomplish here.So there's no chance to disconnect here at Discover. I will say that the difference in terms of the tightening of our charge-off outlook in terms of updated guidance and what happened in the reserve has a couple of factors that are at play there. The first is, we're talking about a three-quarter period of forecasting on the charge-offs. And we gave a fairly wide range, which we intend to tighten as each quarter passes.On the reserves, we take a number of different factors, including the macro environment portfolio.
And then there's certainly a level of management judgment that we use to ensure that we have an appropriate reserve under financial accounting standards. So that's essentially a quick sketch of the process that we use.Dominick Gabriele Excellent. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Have a good day.John Greene Thank you.Operator Thank you. Our next question will come from Mihir Bhatia with Bank of America. Your line is open.Unidentified Analyst Hi. This is Nate Rich [ph] on for Mihir Bhatia. Quick question for me. Are you seeing any changes to the credit quality for new applicants? I understand that you're tightening credit and underwriting. But just curious to see how those consumers are asking for loans now versus a year or two ago?Roger Hochschild Yes.
I mean it's a tricky question to answer, because it varies by channel. Obviously, we did quite a lot of pre-approved marketing. So we kind of set the criteria who applies and even within our non-pre-approved channels, we tend to be targeted. So I haven't seen, I would guess, a huge difference in terms of applicant profile, but our new account profile has tended to improve as we've tightened credit.Unidentified Analyst Okay. And then as a quick follow-up, can you just talk about the performance? Like how are card loan business from like 2020 or 2022 performing versus the loans pre-pandemic?Roger Hochschild Yes. I think in general, John mentioned, all of the vintages are performing as expected. And so total losses are still normalizing in line with what we forecast.
So I would say continued strong performance across the board. And we haven't seen huge differences in behavior by vintage.Unidentified Analyst Okay. Thank you.Operator Thank you. Our next question will come from Mark DeVries with Barclays. Your line is open.Mark DeVries [indiscernible] Roger Hochschild Hey, Mark, I think your line is open. Hey, Chelsea, we'll come back to Mark offline.Operator Okay. Yes, sir. And as at this moment, there are no further questions in the queue. So I would like to turn it back over to management for any additional or closing remarks.Eric Wasserstrom Great. Well, if there are any additional questions, please reach out to us here at the IR team. And thanks very much. Have a great day.Operator Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.
This does conclude today's conference, and we appreciate your participation. You may disconnect at any time.
FAQs
What is the financial update for Discover important 2023? ›
First Quarter 2023 Results
Discover Financial Services (NYSE: DFS) today reported net income of $1.0 billion or $3.58 per diluted share for the first quarter of 2023, as compared to a net income of $1.2 billion or $4.22 per diluted share for the first quarter of 2022.
Valuation metrics show that Discover Financial Services may be undervalued. Its Value Score of A indicates it would be a good pick for value investors. The financial health and growth prospects of DFS, demonstrate its potential to outperform the market. It currently has a Growth Score of C.
What is discover financial services q3 earnings? ›The financial services provider reported $3.58 earnings per share for the quarter, missing the consensus estimate of $3.84 by $0.26. The business earned $3.75 billion during the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $3.71 billion. Its quarterly revenue was up 29.3% compared to the same quarter last year.
What is DFS stock term? ›Definitive Feasibility Study: If a PFS has suggested viability, a mining/oil & gas company will move to a DFS as it tightens its assessment of a proposed new project.
What is the Discover Financial Services controversy? ›The company also engaged in illegal debt collection tactics, including calling consumers early in the morning and late at night. The CFPB's order requires Discover to refund $16 million to consumers, pay a $2.5 million penalty, and improve its billing, student loan interest reporting, and collection practices.
Why does Discover decline? ›Key Points About: Why was my card declined? If you reach your credit limit (or if your limit decreased), you may get a declined card when you make a purchase. Sometimes large purchases may appear suspicious to your credit card company and cause them to decline your purchase.
Will FIS stock go up? ›Stock Price Forecast
The 26 analysts offering 12-month price forecasts for Fidelity National Information Services Inc have a median target of 70.00, with a high estimate of 90.00 and a low estimate of 56.00. The median estimate represents a +27.32% increase from the last price of 54.98.
Stock Price Forecast
The 18 analysts offering 12-month price forecasts for Discover Financial Services have a median target of 120.00, with a high estimate of 129.00 and a low estimate of 101.00. The median estimate represents a +23.63% increase from the last price of 97.06.
High | $36.00 |
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Median | $19.00 |
Low | $11.00 |
Average | $20.33 |
Current Price | $13.29 |
There are typically 4 dividends per year (excluding specials), and the dividend cover is approximately 5.4. Our premium tools have predicted Discover Financial Services with 89% accuracy. Sign up for Discover Financial Services and we'll email you the dividend information when they declare.
Is Discover Bank stable? ›
Fitch Ratings - New York - 21 Apr 2023: Fitch Ratings has affirmed Discover Financial Services' (DFS) and Discover Bank's ratings, including their Long-Term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs), at 'BBB+'. The Rating Outlook is Stable.
What is discover dividend payout ratio? ›Ratings - DFS
21% payout ratio (sector 30%). Stable. 2.78% forward dividend yield. Top 50%.
Its primary source of revenues are transaction fees charged for switching and settling ATM's, personal identification number's (“PIN”) and POS debit and signature debit transactions initiated through the use of debit cards issued by participating financial institutions.
How does a DFS work? ›How a DFS works. A DFS clusters together multiple storage nodes and logically distributes data sets across multiple nodes that each have their own computing power and storage. The data on a DFS can reside on various types of storage devices, such as solid-state drives and hard disk drives.
What is DFS stock price to book? ›Historical price to book ratio values for Discover Financial Services (DFS) over the last 10 years. The current price to book ratio for Discover Financial Services as of May 16, 2023 is 1.84.
Why do so many people not take Discover? ›Merchants Pay More
It may come as no surprise that the reason many merchants opt-out of accepting Discover cards (and American Express, for that matter) is about the bottom line. The Discover card is also like American Express in that they both charge a bit more to store owners to accept their cards.
The Discover Card is was owned by Morgan Stanley; it is now an independent financial company. (Please see update below.)
Why do most businesses not accept Discover? ›Discover has one-seventh of the number of active cards as Visa. Because of this, many merchants determine that there's not enough of an incentive for their business to accept these cards.
Is Discover Bank having problems? ›Discover is up and running now. In the last 24 hours there was 0 outages.
What are the disadvantages of Discover Bank? ›
- The $2,500 minimum deposit for CDs and the money market account is steep.
- Discover's outgoing wire transfer fee is higher than what some other banks charge.
- Discover maintains only one branch, so it's not ideal for those who wish to bank in person.
FIS said it would spin off Worldpay—which it acquired for $43 billion in 2019, plus it missed estimates for its 2023 guidance. The announcement tanked Fidelity's stock. The bad news outweighed narrow beats on revenue (up 1%) and adjusted earnings per share (down 11%) in the fourth quarter.
Should I sell FIS stock? ›Out of 13 analysts, 4 (30.77%) are recommending FIS as a Strong Buy, 3 (23.08%) are recommending FIS as a Buy, 5 (38.46%) are recommending FIS as a Hold, 0 (0%) are recommending FIS as a Sell, and 1 (7.69%) are recommending FIS as a Strong Sell.
Is FIS undervalued? ›...
FIS Competitors. Fidelity National Information Services Inc.
Company | Fidelity National Information Services Inc NYSE:FIS Loading... |
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Market Cap | 33.6B USD |
Profitability | 43/100 |
Solvency | 30/100 |
Intrinsic Value | 93.77 USD 39% Undervalued |
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What is safe stock price target? ›Safehold Inc (NYSE:SAFE)
The 6 analysts offering 12-month price forecasts for Safehold Inc have a median target of 32.50, with a high estimate of 46.00 and a low estimate of 29.00. The median estimate represents a +21.07% increase from the last price of 26.85.
Historical daily share price chart and data for Target since 1983 adjusted for splits. The latest closing stock price for Target as of May 22, 2023 is 151.91. The all-time high Target stock closing price was 257.58 on November 16, 2021.
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Dominion Energy Inc. (D) | Utilities | 4.8% |
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How long should I keep the stock to get dividend? ›
The ex-dividend date for stocks is usually set one business day before the record date. If you purchase a stock on its ex-dividend date or after, you will not receive the next dividend payment. Instead, the seller gets the dividend. If you purchase before the ex-dividend date, you get the dividend.
How many days do you need to hold a stock to get dividend? ›Briefly, in order to be eligible for payment of stock dividends, you must buy the stock (or already own it) at least two days before the date of record and still own the shares at the close of trading one business day before the ex-date.
How long do you have to hold a stock to get the dividend payout? ›The ex-dividend date is the first day the stock trades without its dividend, thus ex-dividend. If you want to get the dividend payment, you need to own the stock by this day. That means you have to buy before the end of the day before the ex-dividend date to get the next dividend.
Is Discover Bank safe from collapse? ›Yes, Discover Bank is FDIC insured (FDIC# 5649).
What rank is Discover Bank in the US? ›Overview. An online bank, Discover Bank had assets of $113 billion as of June 30, 2022, ranking No. 31 in the country. Discover Bank offers checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, CDs, credit cards, student loans, home equity loans and personal loans.
What are the pros and cons of Discover Bank? ›Pros | Cons |
---|---|
Cash back with your debit card High interest rates on savings, CD, and money market accounts Long CD terms 24/7 customer service | Can't bank in person Need $2,500 to open a CD or money market account Doesn't reimburse out-of-network ATM fees |
Generally speaking, a dividend payout ratio of 30-50% is considered healthy, while anything over 50% could be unsustainable.
What is the best dividend stock ratio? ›A range of 35% to 55% is considered healthy and appropriate from a dividend investor's point of view. A company that is likely to distribute roughly half of its earnings as dividends means that the company is well established and a leader in its industry.
What is a bad dividend payout ratio? ›Dividend Payout Ratio Conclusion
A dividend payout ratio is industry-specific but is usually healthy between 30 and 50%. If the ratio is less than 0% or over 100%, the company is probably losing money.
- Understand Where You're At.
- Look at Money Positively.
- Write Down Your Goals.
- Track Your Spending.
- Pay Yourself First.
- Spend Less.
- Buy Experiences Not Things.
- Pay Off Debt.
How to become financially stable in 2023? ›
- Reduce your monthly bills. ...
- Reassess your credit card habits. ...
- Look for higher rates on your cash. ...
- Sell what you aren't using. ...
- Pick up a side hustle.
Consider these Discover upgrade options when you want to earn more on your credit card. If you find yourself frequently traveling, upgrade your Discover it® Cash Back Credit Card to Discover it® Miles. This card allows you to earn unlimited 1.5X miles on every purchase, including groceries or gas.
Why does discover keep increasing credit limit? ›Automatic credit limit increases
If you have used your credit card responsibly and have made on-time payments, your credit card issuer may automatically increase your credit limit.
- Dividend stocks. ...
- Investing in a high-yield savings account or certificate of deposit (CD) ...
- Affiliate marketing. ...
- Real estate investing. ...
- Peer-to-peer lending. ...
- Real estate investment trusts (REITs) ...
- Rent out parking space. ...
- Rent out a room in your home.
Having trotted out those disclaimers, the math result is that financial independence happens when your assets are equal to your expenses divided by 4%. In other words, Assets = Expenses / 0.04 = Expenses * 25. Once your assets are 25x your expenses then you're financially independent and able to retire at any time.
Can you be financially free in 10 years? ›The 10% rule: Financial freedom in 10-years (or less)
If every year you can replace an additional 10% of your current income doing work you love, you can achieve financial freedom in no more than 10 years. If you make $50,000 from your day job in year one, you will aim to make $5,000 from your side hustle.
You might need $5 million to $10 million to qualify as having a very high net worth while it may take $30 million or more to be considered ultra-high net worth. That's how financial advisors typically view wealth.
Should you keep cash in 2023? ›The answer is no, according to advisors and investment analysts. "Allocating more funds to high-yielding CDs, money market funds, or treasuries may seem prudent; however, this is a form of market timing and should be avoided," explained Jonathan Shenkman of Shenkman Wealth Management.
Is 2023 a good year to retire? ›Make no mistake, I think 2023 will be a solid year for retirees. Social Security benefits are way up, Medicare premiums are falling, and hopefully, inflation will keep falling. But after a year during which inflation topped out at over 9% and Medicare premiums shot up, there's still a lot to make up for.
What is the maximum credit limit on a Discover card? ›The highest credit card limit we've come across for the Discover it® Cash Back is $56,500. That's much higher than the minimum starting credit limit of $500. The card has a 0% intro APR on new purchases and balance transfers. Once the introductory period ends, the regular interest rates apply.
Does Discover it do a hard pull? ›
Yes, the Discover it® Secured Credit Card will do a hard pull. You can apply for it with bad credit though. You can prequalify for the Discover it Secured Credit Card on Discover's pre-qualification page, which will not affect your credit score as it will be a soft pull.
What is the difference between Discover it and Discover? ›Earning rate. The key difference between these cards is the amount of cash back that they offer. The Discover it® Cash Back offers a bonus on rotating categories, while the Discover it® chrome offers on an ongoing bonus on gas and restaurant purchases.
What is the average credit card limit? ›What is considered a “normal” credit limit among most Americans? The average American had access to $30,233 in credit across all of their credit cards in 2021, according to Experian. But the average credit card balance was $5,221 — well below the average credit limit.
What is a high credit limit? ›A high credit limit is a limit of $5,000 or more. For high credit limits, you'll need good-to-excellent credit, high income and low existing debt, if any. If you have good credit, you should have high odds of getting approved for a credit limit around $5,000.
How many credit cards is too many to have open? ›It's generally recommended that you have two to three credit card accounts at a time, in addition to other types of credit. Remember that your total available credit and your debt to credit ratio can impact your credit scores. If you have more than three credit cards, it may be hard to keep track of monthly payments.