CB Financial Services CBFV Common Equity Tier One Risk Based Capital Required For Capital Adequacy To Risk Weighted Assets
Common Equity Tier One Risk Based Capital Required For Capital Adequacy To Risk Weighted Assets at other companies
Other financials
Where this comes from
Reported directly by CB Financial Services in its filing.
Tagged under the XBRL concept cbfv:CommonEquityTierOneRiskBasedCapitalRequiredForCapitalAdequacyToRiskWeightedAssets.
The official record: CB Financial Services’s 10-K, filed March 13, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →
Ask your AI about CB Financial Services's common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets.
Connect your AI assistant and compare it to peers, right in your chat.
Connect your AI

Claude
Questions, answered.
- What is CB Financial Services's common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets?
- CB Financial Services (CBFV) reported common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets of 4.5% in Q4 2025.
- How has CB Financial Services's common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets changed year-over-year?
- CB Financial Services's common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets decreased by 0.0% year-over-year, from 4.5% to 4.5%.
- What is the long-term trend for CB Financial Services's common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets?
- Over 5 years (2020 to 2025), CB Financial Services's common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets has grown at a 0.0% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 4.5% to 4.5%.
- What does common equity tier one risk based capital required for capital adequacy to risk weighted assets mean?
- This metric measures the minimum CET1 capital ratio required relative to risk-weighted assets to meet regulatory adequacy thresholds. It provides a standardized view of how much high-quality capital the bank must hold to support its specific risk profile. Investors use this to evaluate the bank's capital efficiency and adherence to risk-based regulatory mandates.