- Previous Close
5.35 - Open
5.26 - Bid 5.18 x 1000
- Ask 5.19 x 1400
- Day's Range
5.16 - 5.27 - 52 Week Range
4.78 - 6.66 - Volume
118,046 - Avg. Volume
299,630 - Market Cap (intraday)
38.717B - Beta (5Y Monthly) 0.74
- PE Ratio (TTM)
19.22 - EPS (TTM)
0.27 - Earnings Date Oct 30, 2024
- Forward Dividend & Yield 0.32 (5.92%)
- Ex-Dividend Date Jul 25, 2024
- 1y Target Est
6.43
Banco Santander (Brasil) S.A., together with its subsidiaries, provides various banking products and services to individuals, small and medium enterprises, and corporate customers in Brazil and internationally. The company operates through Commercial Banking and Global Wholesale Banking segments. It offers local loans, commercial financing options, development bank funds, and cash management services; export and import financing, guarantees, structuring of asset services. In addition, the company provides financing and advisory services for infrastructure projects and capital markets instruments, as well as offers equity transactions and mergers and acquisitions services. Further, it offers foreign exchange products, derivatives, and investments to institutional investors, corporate clients, and individuals. Additionally, the company provides research services, as well as offers brokerage services for corporate, institutional, and individual investors. Furthermore, it provides deposits and other bank funding instruments, and debit and credit cards. The company provides financial services and products to its customers through multichannel distribution network comprising branches, mini-branches, ATMs, call centers, Internet banking, and mobile banking. Banco Santander (Brasil) S.A. was incorporated in 1985 and is headquartered in São Paulo, Brazil.
www.santander.com.br55,091
Full Time Employees
December 31
Fiscal Year Ends
Sector
Industry
Recent News: BSBR
View MorePerformance Overview: BSBR
Trailing total returns as of 10/3/2024, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is
.YTD Return
1-Year Return
3-Year Return
5-Year Return
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Statistics: BSBR
View MoreValuation Measures
Market Cap
19.89B
Enterprise Value
--
Trailing P/E
19.64
Forward P/E
6.83
PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
--
Price/Sales (ttm)
4.98
Price/Book (mrq)
1.85
Enterprise Value/Revenue
5.94
Enterprise Value/EBITDA
--
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
Profit Margin
26.40%
Return on Assets (ttm)
1.03%
Return on Equity (ttm)
10.01%
Revenue (ttm)
43.5B
Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
11.49B
Diluted EPS (ttm)
0.27
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
Total Cash (mrq)
267.43B
Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
--
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
--
Research Analysis: BSBR
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Research Reports: BSBR
View MoreThe Argus Global Dividend Model Portfolio
Dividends are supposed to lend stability to a portfolio. However, U.S.-based equity income investors have experienced a high degree of volatility in recent years. In 2018, the Federal Reserve embarked on an aggressive campaign to raise interest rates -- causing Treasury yields to swoop and dive, resulting in a wild ride for supposedly stable U.S. high-income equities. In 2019, the Fed lowered rates, in order to restore a normal upward slope in the yield curve. And in 2020, global investors, fearing the spread of the coronavirus, have pushed rates lower still. The endless speculation over the direction of rates has created market-timing headaches for equity income investors. They have endured wide swings in prices for rate-sensitive equity classes such as utilities, REITs and MLPs -- even as generally positive industry fundamentals remained largely intact. In our view, investing in international income stocks is one way to increase portfolio diversification while reducing sensitivity to U.S interest rates. Investing in overseas stocks carries its own set of risks, including the impact of currency exchange and geopolitical turmoil. But there are also many positives in this asset class for U.S. investors.
The Argus Global Dividend Model Portfolio
Dividends are supposed to lend stability to a portfolio. However, U.S.-based equity income investors have experienced a high degree of volatility in recent years. In 2018, the Federal Reserve embarked on an aggressive campaign to raise interest rates -- causing Treasury yields to swoop and dive, resulting in a wild ride for supposedly stable U.S. high-income equities. In 2019, the Fed lowered rates, in order to restore a normal upward slope in the yield curve. And in 2020, global investors, fearing the spread of the coronavirus, have pushed rates lower still. The endless speculation over the direction of rates has created market-timing headaches for equity income investors. They have endured wide swings in prices for rate-sensitive equity classes such as utilities, REITs and MLPs -- even as generally positive industry fundamentals remained largely intact. In our view, investing in international income stocks is one way to increase portfolio diversification while reducing sensitivity to U.S interest rates. Investing in overseas stocks carries its own set of risks, including the impact of currency exchange and geopolitical turmoil. But there are also many positives in this asset class for U.S. investors.
The Argus Global Dividend Model Portfolio
Dividends are supposed to lend stability to a portfolio. However, U.S.-based equity income investors have experienced a high degree of volatility in recent years. In 2018, the Federal Reserve embarked on an aggressive campaign to raise interest rates -- causing Treasury yields to swoop and dive, resulting in a wild ride for supposedly stable U.S. high-income equities. In 2019, the Fed lowered rates, in order to restore a normal upward slope in the yield curve. And in 2020, global investors, fearing the spread of the coronavirus, have pushed rates lower still. The endless speculation over the direction of rates has created market-timing headaches for equity income investors. They have endured wide swings in prices for rate-sensitive equity classes such as utilities, REITs and MLPs -- even as generally positive industry fundamentals remained largely intact. In our view, investing in international income stocks is one way to increase portfolio diversification while reducing sensitivity to U.S interest rates. Investing in overseas stocks carries its own set of risks, including the impact of currency exchange and geopolitical turmoil. But there are also many positives in this asset class for U.S. investors.
The Argus Global Dividend Model Portfolio
Dividends are supposed to lend stability to a portfolio. However, U.S.-based equity income investors have experienced a high degree of volatility in recent years. The Federal Reserve in 2018 embarked on an aggressive campaign to raise interest rates, causing Treasury yields to swoop and dive, resulting in a wild ride for supposedly stable U.S. high-income equities. The endless speculation over the timing of the Fed's rate hikes created market-timing headaches for equity income investors. They endured wide swings in prices for rate-sensitive equity classes such as utilities, REITs and MLPs - even as generally positive industry fundamentals remained largely intact. In our view, investing in international income stocks is one way to increase portfolio diversification while reducing sensitivity to the Fed's head fakes on rate policy. Investing in overseas stocks carries its own set of risks, including the impact of currency exchange and geopolitical turmoil. But there are also lots of positives in this asset class for U.S. investors.