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SYF

Stock
Financials
Credit Services

Performance overview

SYF Price
Price Chart

Forward-looking statistics

Beta
1.54
Risk
36.37%

Detailed forecast

[disclaimer]

Individual forecast components (weighted-sum)

Company Profile

Synchrony Financial, originally a spinoff of GE Capital's retail financing business, is the largest provider of private-label credit cards in the United States by both outstanding receivables and purchasing volume. Synchrony partners with other firms to market its credit products in their physical stores as well as on their websites and mobile applications. Synchrony operates through three segments: retail card (private-label and co-branded general-purpose credit cards), payment solutions (promotional financing for large ticket purchases), and CareCredit (financing for elective healthcare procedures).

Company info

SectorFinancials
IndustryCredit Services
Employees16K
Market cap$17.5B

Fundamentals

Enterprise value$22.0B
Revenue$8.7B
Revenue per employee—
Profit margin34.04%
Debt to equity1.03

Security info

ExchangeNyse American
Type of shareCommon Stock
Earnings per share (EPS)$7.30
Dividend per share$1.00
Revenue per share$22.23
Avg trading volume (30 day)$236M
Avg trading volume (10 day)$262M
Put-call ratio—

Macro factor sensitivity

Growth+2.7
Credit+4.5
Liquidity-1.3
Inflation-1.3
Commodities+0.2
Interest Rates-1.6

Valuation

Dividend yield1.45%
PEG Ratio10.84
Price to sales3.07
P/E Ratio10.84
Enterprise Value to Revenue2.53
Price to book1.74

Upcoming events

Next earnings dayApril 22, 2025
Next dividend day—
Ex. dividend dayMay 5, 2025

News

Why Synchrony (SYF) is a Top Value Stock for the Long-Term

Wondering how to pick strong, market-beating stocks for your investment portfolio? Look no further than the Zacks Style Scores.

Zacks Investment Research (July 2, 2025)
Banks are keeping credit card rates high even after the CFPB rule they blamed for high APRs was killed

Banks quickly raised interest rates to record levels and added new monthly fees on credit cards last year when a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule threatened a key revenue source for the industry. Now they're far more reluctant to reverse those steps, even after bank trade groups succeeded in killing the CFPB rule in federal court last month.

CNBC (May 7, 2025)

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