Stock Price
7.09
Daily Change
-0.14 -1.94%
Monthly
-6.71%
Yearly
21.61%
Q1 Forecast
6.96



Peers Price Chg Day Year Date
Sierra Bancorp 34.57 -0.92 -2.59% 20.71% Mar/05
Capital City Bank 42.48 -0.85 -1.96% 17.71% Mar/05
Capitol Federal Financial 7.09 -0.14 -1.94% 21.61% Mar/05
Financial Institutions 31.29 -0.54 -1.70% 16.32% Mar/05
HomeStreet 14.83 -0.46 -3.01% 60.32% Mar/05
Kearny Financial 7.61 -0.20 -2.56% 14.95% Mar/05
Nasb Financial 39.99 0.49 1.24% 9.59% Mar/03
Northfield Bancorp 13.37 -0.09 -0.67% 17.38% Mar/05
Provident Financial Services 21.25 -0.30 -1.39% 22.62% Mar/05
Tfs Financial 13.91 -0.33 -2.32% 10.75% Mar/05

Indexes Price Day Year Date
USND 22749 -57.36 -0.25% 25.90% Mar/05
US2000 2584 -51.84 -1.97% 25.05% Mar/05

Capitol Federal Financial traded at $7.09 this Thursday March 5th, decreasing $0.14 or 1.94 percent since the previous trading session. Looking back, over the last four weeks, Capitol Federal Financial lost 6.71 percent. Over the last 12 months, its price rose by 21.61 percent. Looking ahead, we forecast Capitol Federal Financial to be priced at 6.96 by the end of this quarter and at 6.34 in one year, according to Trading Economics global macro models projections and analysts expectations.

Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. is the savings and loan holding company. The Company provides a range of retail banking services through its subsidiary, Capitol Federal Savings Bank (the Bank), a federal savings bank that serves primarily the metropolitan areas of Topeka, Wichita, Lawrence, Manhattan, Emporia and Salina, Kansas and portions of the Kansas City metropolitan area. It attracts deposits primarily from the general public and invest those funds in permanent loans secured by first mortgages on owner-occupied, one- to four-family residences. In addition to its full-service banking offices, it provides services through its call center, which operates on extended hours, mobile banking, telephone banking, and online banking and bill payment services. Its primary lending business is originating and purchasing loans secured by one- to four-family residential properties, which results in a loan concentration in residential first mortgage loans located in Kansas and Missouri.