NASDAQ: CBK
Financial Services · Banks
Market Cap
$393.29M
52w High
$30.17
52w Low
$23.24
P/E
10.40
Volume
36.27K
Outstanding Shares
13.70M
Price vs Fundamentals
The stock rose 19.63% over the last year. Revenue declined 3.58% over the trailing twelve months. Operating margin moved from 30.52% to 37.49%. Free cash flow declined 2.36% over the trailing twelve months.
The stock has moved higher against modestly improving underlying metrics. The operating data does not yet tell a clear story — the move may reflect sentiment, sector rotation, or macro factors rather than company-specific earnings power.
Operating margin currently stands at 37.49%. A decisive move in revenue — currently down 3.58% — would be the clearest signal to resolve the ambiguity.
Company profile
Commercial Bancgroup, Inc. operates as the bank holding company for Commercial Bank that provides a range of banking and financial services to individual and corporate customers in Kentucky, North Carolina, and Tennessee.
Valuation
Stock splits
No stock splits recorded for this ticker.
Profitability & growth
Standard profitability metrics can be misleading for financial/insurance companies. GAAP requires unrealized investment gains/losses in net income (affecting ROE), and margins are blended across diverse business segments.
Analyst consensus
Analyst ratings tend to be lagging indicators. Use as one signal among many.
Earnings
Full quarter-by-quarter history of actuals vs estimates. Switch into compare mode to inspect one metric year-over-year.
Next report
Jul 27, 2026
Q3 FY26 · EPS est $0.70 · Revenue est $23.4M
View
Dividends
$0.10/shareQuarterlyEx-div Jun 15, 2026 · in 11dCBK pays a dividend with a 0.35% forward yield.
Forward Yield
0.35%
Annual Div / Share
$0.10
CAGR
—
Payout Ratio
3.62%
Bank — specialized metrics apply
Dividend Growth Rate
Income Projection
Today
$0/mo
In 5 yrs
$0/mo
In 10 yrs
$0/mo
| Today | In 5 yrs | In 10 yrs |
|---|---|---|
$3/yr $0/mo | $3/yr $0/mo | $3/yr $0/mo |
5yr and 10yr income use the current dividend with no growth assumption because bank payout growth depends on earnings cycles, regulation, and capital policy.