USB

U.S. Bancorp Price

USB
$55.08
-$0.45(-0.81%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-11 14:57 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-11 14:57, U.S. Bancorp (USB) is priced at $55.08, with a total market cap of $86.19B, a P/E ratio of 10.95, and a dividend yield of 3.70%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $54.98 and $55.87. The current price is 0.18% above the day's low and 1.41% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 10.17M. Over the past 52 weeks, USB has traded between $51.60 to $58.05, and the current price is -5.11% away from the 52-week high.

USB Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$55.31
Market Cap$86.19B
Volume10.17M
P/E Ratio10.95
Dividend Yield (TTM)3.70%
Dividend Amount$0.52
Diluted EPS (TTM)5.02
Net Income (FY)$7.57B
Revenue (FY)$42.86B
Earnings Date2027-01-19
EPS Estimate1.36
Revenue Estimate$7.87B
Shares Outstanding1.55B
Beta (1Y)1.016
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-31
Dividend Payment Date2026-04-15

About USB

U.S. Bancorp, a financial services holding company, provides various financial services to individuals, businesses, institutional organizations, governmental entities and other financial institutions in the United States. It operates in Corporate and Commercial Banking, Consumer and Business Banking, Wealth Management and Investment Services, Payment Services, and Treasury and Corporate Support segments. The company offers depository services, including checking accounts, savings accounts, and time certificate contracts; lending services, such as traditional credit products; and credit card services, lease financing and import/export trade, asset-backed lending, agricultural finance, and other products. It also provides ancillary services comprising capital markets, treasury management, and receivable lock-box collection services to corporate and governmental entity customers; and a range of asset management and fiduciary services for individuals, estates, foundations, business corporations, and charitable organizations. In addition, the company offers investment and insurance products to its customers principally within its markets, as well as fund administration services to a range of mutual and other funds. Further, it provides corporate and purchasing card, and corporate trust services; and merchant processing services, as well as investment management, ATM processing, mortgage banking, insurance, and brokerage and leasing services. As of December 31, 2021, the company provided its products and services through a network of 2,230 banking offices principally operating in the Midwest and West regions of the United States, as well as through on-line services, over mobile devices, and other distribution channels; and operated a network of 4,059 ATMs. The company was founded in 1863 and is headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryBanks - Regional
CEOGunjan Kedia
HeadquartersMinneapolis,MN,US
Official Websitehttps://www.usbank.com
Employees (FY)68.52K
Average Revenue (1Y)$625.52K
Net Income per Employee$110.56K

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U.S. Bancorp (USB) Latest News

2026-03-09 03:57SlowMist CISO warns that the USB version of OpenClaw poses security risksGate News: On March 9, CISO 23pds (Shan Ge) posted on the X platform warning that U disk versions of OpenClaw products have appeared on platforms like Taobao and Xianyu. Sellers claim that users can simply plug and play after purchasing and configuring the model. However, 23pds pointed out that OpenClaw has excessive permissions, making it difficult for ordinary users to identify malicious skills. Using such products can easily lead to asset loss.2026-02-13 08:27South Korean police lose Bitcoin seized and stored in cold wallets since 2021PANews February 13 News, according to The Block, the Seoul Gangnam Police Department recently discovered during an internal investigation that 22 bitcoins (currently valued at approximately $1.5 million) seized in November 2021 had been transferred from a USB cold wallet. As the related investigation has been paused, the asset loss went unnoticed for a long time. The involved USB device itself was not stolen. The Northern Gyeonggi Provincial Police Department has initiated an internal investigation to determine the details of the fund loss and whether any internal personnel were involved. The police declined to provide further details about the ongoing investigation. This discovery follows a nationwide special inspection of seized assets initiated after the recent loss of 320 seized bitcoins by the Gwangju District Prosecutor's Office. Local media reported that the Gwangju prosecutors' evidence management personnel mistakenly logged a phishing website, leading to the theft of the seized bitcoins.2026-01-09 05:21France witnesses another violent incident related to cryptocurrency: masked gunmen break into a home and kidnap, specifically targeting "encrypted USB drives"Violent crimes related to cryptocurrencies in France have once again attracted attention. On Monday evening local time, three masked gunmen broke into a private residence in Manosque, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France, kidnapping a woman inside and stealing a USB drive containing her partner's encrypted data. This incident highlights the ongoing risk of "cryptocurrency physical robberies" and "wrench attacks" in France. According to French media outlet Le Parisien, the incident occurred on Chemin Champs de Pruniers. After entering the residence, the suspects threatened the victim with a pistol and used physical violence, then quickly fled with the targeted USB drive. The USB drive is believed to contain important encrypted assets or private key information, making it the clear target of the operation. Police reports indicate that the victim was not seriously injured; she managed to free herself and call the police within minutes. The case has been officially filed, and local criminal investigation units along with the national police regional bureau are jointly investigating. The suspects are still at large. Such cases are not isolated. Jameson Lopp, CTO of security company Casa, documented over 70 "wrench attacks" related to cryptocurrencies worldwide in his public database, with more than 14 reported in France, making it one of the high-incidence countries for crypto-related violent crimes in Europe. These cases often involve physical threats to force victims to hand over private keys, hardware wallets, or encrypted storage devices. Network crime advisor David Sehyeon Baek told Decrypt that France has a relatively high crime base, and cryptocurrency wealth is highly concentrated among founders, traders, and public figures. Coupled with the widespread knowledge of digital assets, this makes the country a fertile ground for opportunistic and organized crypto crimes. He emphasized that compared to cash or traditional banking systems, cryptocurrencies offer high profits, rapid cross-border transfers, and relatively low traceability, making them more attractive targets for criminal networks. Even more concerning is that vulnerabilities have appeared within France’s law enforcement system. Reports indicate that a French tax official was prosecuted last June for abusing access to the national tax database to target potential victims, including cryptocurrency investors, and leaking personal information to criminals. Investigations show that the official’s search activities were unrelated to their tax duties and even temporally linked to subsequent violent home invasions. As the scale of crypto assets grows, the violent risks targeting holders in real life are gradually evolving from "marginal incidents" into a security issue that cannot be ignored.

Hot Posts About U.S. Bancorp (USB)

TheMemefather

TheMemefather

05-09 09:51
If you're serious about holding crypto long-term, you probably already know that self-custody is the move. Non-custodial wallets are honestly the only real way to be in full control of your assets—no third parties, no frozen funds, no KYC requirements. But here's the thing: they come with their own set of risks that most people overlook. The main trade-off is simple. You eliminate counterparty risk (exchanges getting hacked, regulators stepping in), but you take on the responsibility of protecting your seed phrase or private keys. Lose that seed? Your funds are gone forever. There's no customer support to call. That's why everyone hammers home the same security rules: never share your seed with anyone, store it physically in a safe place, and only download wallets from official sources. Now, when it comes to finding the best non-custodial wallets, you've basically got two paths: hardware or software. Software wallets are apps you install on your phone or computer. They're free, convenient, and honestly pretty secure if you choose reputable ones and keep them updated. MetaMask is probably the most popular—it started on Ethereum and EVM chains like Arbitrum and Avalanche, and recently added Bitcoin support. Millions use it for DeFi and NFTs. Another solid option is Trust Wallet, which actually has broader chain support than MetaMask. It works with hundreds of chains, including non-EVM ones like Bitcoin from day one. Trust Wallet also lets you stake directly and buy crypto with fiat, though the browser experience isn't quite as polished. For Solana users, Phantom is the go-to. The catch with software wallets? Your device is always connected to the internet, which technically means continuous exposure to potential attacks. That's where hardware wallets come in. Hardware wallets are physical devices that stay offline most of the time, which makes them significantly more secure. Even when connected, your private keys never leave the device—only someone with physical access can actually use them. The trade-off is you have to buy one, and they require purchasing from official retailers only (not random Amazon sellers). Ledger is the heavyweight here. The Nano X is their flagship model, supporting tons of chains and thousands of tokens. It has Bluetooth, integrates with the Ledger Live app for staking, and it's widely trusted. The downside? The code is closed-source, so you can't audit it yourself. That said, no major vulnerabilities have been found recently. Trezor is Ledger's main competitor, and it flips the script with 100% open-source code. You can literally inspect how it works at every technical level, which some consider more secure. It has a nice colored touchscreen too. The trade-off is higher cost and slightly fewer native chains. Setting up a software wallet takes minutes: download from the official site, create a wallet, save your seed phrase somewhere physical and secure (not on your computer), set a password, and you're done. Hardware wallet setup is similar but adds a step—you need to buy the device first, connect it to your computer or phone via USB or Bluetooth, install the firmware and interface software, then follow the same wallet creation process. The best non-custodial wallets really come down to your needs. If you want simplicity and don't mind keeping assets on an internet-connected device, software wallets are hard to beat. If you're holding serious amounts long-term and want maximum security, a hardware wallet is worth the investment. Either way, the key is treating your seed like nuclear launch codes—because in the world of self-custody, it basically is.
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bridge_anxiety

bridge_anxiety

05-09 07:11
Just caught wind of something pretty significant happening in European fintech. Bison Bank in Portugal just rolled out what looks like the first bank-issued stablecoin product under the EU's new MiCA framework. Worth paying attention to because this is the kind of regulatory milestone that usually signals where the broader market is heading. So here's what they're launching - two tokens called EUB and USB. One tracks the euro, the other the dollar. Pretty straightforward on the surface, but the real story is how they're positioning these for cross-border payments and settlements. Each token gets backed one-to-one by actual fiat reserves, so there's no fractional reserve nonsense here. They're designed to work between institutional banking clients who need faster international transfers without the usual intermediaries. What makes this MiCA stablecoin launch notable is the regulatory structure behind it. Bison Bank is a fully regulated European credit institution, which means these tokens operate within the formal banking system rather than existing in some gray zone. They're building this as an electronic money token specifically, not just another crypto project slapping a stablecoin label on itself. The timing is interesting too. MiCA itself became the EU's harmonized rulebook for crypto-assets across member states. Portugal formalized it through Law 69/2025, and now we're seeing the first tangible products emerge from that framework. The regulatory bodies - Banco de Portugal handling registration and AML, CMVM overseeing tokenized securities - are all in place. Anyone operating under old national rules has until mid-2026 to get their full MiCA licenses sorted. There's also a Basel angle worth noting. The MiCA stablecoin might qualify for preferential treatment under Basel Committee rules starting January 2026, which could let financial institutions use it in treasury operations with capital requirements tied to the underlying fiat value rather than treated as full crypto exposure. That's the kind of detail that matters for institutional adoption. Bison Bank created a separate digital assets division back in 2022 for crypto services, so they've been building toward something like this. Now they're essentially bridging traditional banking infrastructure with blockchain settlement technology - which is probably what regulated stablecoin adoption actually looks like rather than the hype cycles we usually see. The market implications are worth watching. You're looking at a regulated European bank issuing stablecoins that comply with institutional requirements and banking standards. This isn't a startup experiment - it's an actual credit institution making this move. As more European banks prepare for wider digital asset use, products like these MiCA-compliant stablecoins will probably become the baseline for institutional-grade crypto infrastructure rather than the exception.
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