Investors may be wondering if Bread Financial Holdings at US$86.48 is still offering value after a strong run, or if most of the opportunity is already priced in.
The stock has posted returns of 2.0% over 7 days, 16.3% over 30 days, 14.8% year to date and 73.8% over the last year, with a 244.9% return over 3 years and 1.9% over 5 years.
Recent coverage has focused on Bread Financial Holdings as investors reassess consumer finance stocks and the risks and rewards tied to credit cycles. This context helps explain why the share price has moved sharply over the past year and why valuation has become a key talking point.
Bread Financial Holdings currently has a value score of 5 out of 6. The rest of this article will walk through the standard valuation checks investors often use and will also point to a more complete way of thinking about value at the end.
The Excess Returns model evaluates how efficiently a company uses shareholders’ equity. It asks whether its returns on equity, after accounting for the cost of that equity, support a higher or lower share price.
For Bread Financial Holdings, the model uses a Book Value of $80.51 per share and a Stable EPS estimate of $13.17 per share, based on weighted future Return on Equity estimates from 8 analysts. The Average Return on Equity is 13.56%, compared with a Cost of Equity of $9.67 per share. The difference between those two, the Excess Return, is calculated at $3.50 per share.
The analysis also assumes a Stable Book Value of $97.16 per share, drawn from weighted future Book Value estimates from 5 analysts. Combining these inputs, the Excess Returns framework produces an intrinsic value estimate of about $151.69 per share. With the current share price at US$86.48, this suggests the stock is around 43.0% undervalued on this measure.
Approach 2: Bread Financial Holdings Price vs Earnings
For profitable companies, the P/E ratio is a useful yardstick because it links what you pay for the stock directly to the earnings the company is currently generating. Investors typically accept a higher P/E when they expect stronger earnings growth or see the business as less risky, and a lower P/E when growth expectations are modest or risks are higher.
Bread Financial Holdings trades on a P/E of 6.26x. This is below the Consumer Finance industry average of 10.06x and also below the peer group average of 21.48x. Simply Wall St’s Fair Ratio for the stock is 11.04x. This Fair Ratio is a proprietary estimate of what a “normal” P/E might look like for Bread Financial Holdings, given factors such as its earnings profile, industry, profit margins, market value and risk characteristics.
Compared with simple peer or industry averages, the Fair Ratio aims to be more tailored, because it adjusts for those company specific factors rather than assuming all Consumer Finance stocks should trade on the same multiple. With the current P/E of 6.26x below the Fair Ratio of 11.04x, the stock screens as undervalued on this measure.
Upgrade Your Decision Making: Choose your Bread Financial Holdings Narrative
Earlier it was mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation, so Narratives take the story you believe about a company and plug it directly into forecasts for revenue, earnings and margins to arrive at your own fair value. You can then compare this with the current price to help assess whether the stock looks attractive or not.
On Simply Wall St, Narratives sit on the Community page and are straightforward to use. Each one links a clear investment story to a full financial model and fair value, then updates automatically when new information such as earnings or news arrives.
For Bread Financial Holdings, one investor might build a more cautious Narrative that lines up with a Fair Value around US$50.00, focusing on regulatory questions and credit risk. Another might use a more optimistic Narrative closer to US$95.67, centered on partnerships, technology investment and capital returns. Both views are visible side by side so you can see how different assumptions translate into different fair values.
For Bread Financial Holdings, however, we will make it really easy for you with previews of two leading Bread Financial Holdings Narratives:
🐂 Bread Financial Holdings Bull Case
Fair value in this bullish Narrative: US$95.67 per share
Implied discount to this fair value: around 9.6% below the Narrative fair value at the last close of US$86.48
Revenue growth assumption: 16.95% a year
Highlights investments in technology, digital products and AI that are expected to support efficiency, credit decisioning and tailored credit offers.
Focuses on co brand and private label partnerships, embedded finance products and growing deposits as key drivers of earnings stability and customer engagement.
Flags risks around a tilt toward higher quality borrowers, tight credit standards, competition on partner renewals, regulatory and macro sensitivity and rising cost pressures.
🐻 Bread Financial Holdings Bear Case
Fair value in this more cautious Narrative: US$50.00 per share
Implied premium to this fair value: around 73.0% above the Narrative fair value at the last close of US$86.48
Revenue growth assumption: 6.54% a year
Frames Bread Financial Holdings as a profitable specialist bank reinvesting retained earnings, with tangible common equity of US$48.89 per share seen as a key support.
Points out that the share price previously moved above a US$50.00 ceiling, which, in this view, leaves less room for upside from here.
Stresses attention on credit losses and the impact of new late fee rules on the business model, while noting that recent reported results have been positive.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.