Skip to content

Debt-to-equity at other companies

JPMorgan Chase logo
JPMorgan ChaseJPM
1.4×+0.1×
Bank of America logo
Bank of AmericaBAC
1.1×+0.1×
Wells Fargo & Company logo
Wells Fargo & CompanyWFC
1.2×-0.5×
BOK Financial logo
BOK FinancialBOKF
0.0×
Commerce Bancshares logo
Commerce BancsharesCBSH
0.0×
Regions Financial logo
Regions FinancialRF
0.5×+0.2×

Other financials

Income statement

See full
Revenue$574.8M+6.4%
Net income$171.0M+13.3%
EPS (diluted)$2.65+15.2%

Balance sheet

See full
Cash & equivalents$7.1B-9.0%
Total debt$296.4M
Total equity$4.5B+10.1%
Total assets$52.7B+1.4%

Cash flow

See full
Operating cash flow$237.3M+180%
CapEx$38.6M-5.7%
Free cash flow$198.7M+159%

Valuation

See full
Market cap$9.15B+7.3%
P/E13.7×-0.6×
P/S0.0×

Profitability

See full
Net margin29.5%+1.0pp
FCF margin3.5%

Returns & leverage

See full
Return on equity15.5%0.0pp

Where this comes from

Calculated from Cullen/Frost Bankers’s reported figures.

Based on the most recent quarter.

The official record: Cullen/Frost Bankers’s 10-Q, filed April 30, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

Ask your AI about Cullen/Frost Bankers's debt-to-equity.

Connect your AI assistant and compare it to peers, right in your chat.

Connect your AI
Harbor at dusk
Claude

Questions, answered.

What is Cullen/Frost Bankers's debt-to-equity?
Cullen/Frost Bankers (CFR) reported debt-to-equity of 0.1× in Q4 2025.
What is the long-term trend for Cullen/Frost Bankers's debt-to-equity?
Over 2 years (2020 to 2025), Cullen/Frost Bankers's debt-to-equity has grown at a -7.2% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 0.1× to 0.1×.
What does debt-to-equity mean?
How much debt the company carries for every dollar of shareholder equity.
How do you interpret debt-to-equity?
Lower is generally safer, but moderate leverage can boost returns. Read in the context of cash-flow stability — a utility tolerates more debt than a cyclical. Negative equity makes the ratio meaningless and it is suppressed there.
How does debt-to-equity compare across companies?
Comparable within an industry; capital structures differ sharply across sectors. Not meaningful for banks.