USB

U.S. Bancorp Price

USB
$56,09
-$0,42(-%0,74)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-14 20:57 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-14 20:57, U.S. Bancorp (USB) is priced at $56,09, with a total market cap of $87,79B, a P/E ratio of 10,95, and a dividend yield of %3,64. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $54,39 and $56,33. The current price is %3,12 above the day's low and %0,42 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 5,99M. Over the past 52 weeks, USB has traded between $51,60 to $56,56, and the current price is -%0,83 away from the 52-week high.

USB Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$55,66
Market Cap$87,79B
Volume5,99M
P/E Ratio10,95
Dividend Yield (TTM)%3,64
Dividend Amount$0,52
Diluted EPS (TTM)4,87
Net Income (FY)$7,57B
Revenue (FY)$42,86B
Earnings Date2027-01-19
EPS Estimate1,35
Revenue Estimate$7,81B
Shares Outstanding1,57B
Beta (1Y)1.034
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-31
Dividend Payment Date2026-04-15

About USB

U.S. Bancorp, a financial services holding company, provides various financial services to individuals, businesses, institutional organizations, governmental entities and other financial institutions in the United States. It operates in Corporate and Commercial Banking, Consumer and Business Banking, Wealth Management and Investment Services, Payment Services, and Treasury and Corporate Support segments. The company offers depository services, including checking accounts, savings accounts, and time certificate contracts; lending services, such as traditional credit products; and credit card services, lease financing and import/export trade, asset-backed lending, agricultural finance, and other products. It also provides ancillary services comprising capital markets, treasury management, and receivable lock-box collection services to corporate and governmental entity customers; and a range of asset management and fiduciary services for individuals, estates, foundations, business corporations, and charitable organizations. In addition, the company offers investment and insurance products to its customers principally within its markets, as well as fund administration services to a range of mutual and other funds. Further, it provides corporate and purchasing card, and corporate trust services; and merchant processing services, as well as investment management, ATM processing, mortgage banking, insurance, and brokerage and leasing services. As of December 31, 2021, the company provided its products and services through a network of 2,230 banking offices principally operating in the Midwest and West regions of the United States, as well as through on-line services, over mobile devices, and other distribution channels; and operated a network of 4,059 ATMs. The company was founded in 1863 and is headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryBanks - Regional
CEOGunjan Kedia
HeadquartersMinneapolis,MN,US
Official Websitehttps://www.usbank.com
Employees (FY)68,52K
Average Revenue (1Y)$625,52K
Net Income per Employee$110,56K

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U.S. Bancorp (USB) is currently trading at $56,09, with a 24h change of -%0,74. The 52-week trading range is $51,60–$56,56.

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U.S. Bancorp (USB) Latest News

2026-03-09 03:57

SlowMist CISO warns that the USB version of OpenClaw poses security risks

Gate News: On March 9, CISO 23pds (Shan Ge) posted on the X platform warning that U disk versions of OpenClaw products have appeared on platforms like Taobao and Xianyu. Sellers claim that users can simply plug and play after purchasing and configuring the model. However, 23pds pointed out that OpenClaw has excessive permissions, making it difficult for ordinary users to identify malicious skills. Using such products can easily lead to asset loss.

2026-02-13 08:27

South Korean police lose Bitcoin seized and stored in cold wallets since 2021

PANews February 13 News, according to The Block, the Seoul Gangnam Police Department recently discovered during an internal investigation that 22 bitcoins (currently valued at approximately $1.5 million) seized in November 2021 had been transferred from a USB cold wallet. As the related investigation has been paused, the asset loss went unnoticed for a long time. The involved USB device itself was not stolen. The Northern Gyeonggi Provincial Police Department has initiated an internal investigation to determine the details of the fund loss and whether any internal personnel were involved. The police declined to provide further details about the ongoing investigation. This discovery follows a nationwide special inspection of seized assets initiated after the recent loss of 320 seized bitcoins by the Gwangju District Prosecutor's Office. Local media reported that the Gwangju prosecutors' evidence management personnel mistakenly logged a phishing website, leading to the theft of the seized bitcoins.

2026-01-09 05:21

France witnesses another violent incident related to cryptocurrency: masked gunmen break into a home and kidnap, specifically targeting "encrypted USB drives"

Violent crimes related to cryptocurrencies in France have once again attracted attention. On Monday evening local time, three masked gunmen broke into a private residence in Manosque, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France, kidnapping a woman inside and stealing a USB drive containing her partner's encrypted data. This incident highlights the ongoing risk of "cryptocurrency physical robberies" and "wrench attacks" in France. According to French media outlet Le Parisien, the incident occurred on Chemin Champs de Pruniers. After entering the residence, the suspects threatened the victim with a pistol and used physical violence, then quickly fled with the targeted USB drive. The USB drive is believed to contain important encrypted assets or private key information, making it the clear target of the operation. Police reports indicate that the victim was not seriously injured; she managed to free herself and call the police within minutes. The case has been officially filed, and local criminal investigation units along with the national police regional bureau are jointly investigating. The suspects are still at large. Such cases are not isolated. Jameson Lopp, CTO of security company Casa, documented over 70 "wrench attacks" related to cryptocurrencies worldwide in his public database, with more than 14 reported in France, making it one of the high-incidence countries for crypto-related violent crimes in Europe. These cases often involve physical threats to force victims to hand over private keys, hardware wallets, or encrypted storage devices. Network crime advisor David Sehyeon Baek told Decrypt that France has a relatively high crime base, and cryptocurrency wealth is highly concentrated among founders, traders, and public figures. Coupled with the widespread knowledge of digital assets, this makes the country a fertile ground for opportunistic and organized crypto crimes. He emphasized that compared to cash or traditional banking systems, cryptocurrencies offer high profits, rapid cross-border transfers, and relatively low traceability, making them more attractive targets for criminal networks. Even more concerning is that vulnerabilities have appeared within France’s law enforcement system. Reports indicate that a French tax official was prosecuted last June for abusing access to the national tax database to target potential victims, including cryptocurrency investors, and leaking personal information to criminals. Investigations show that the official’s search activities were unrelated to their tax duties and even temporally linked to subsequent violent home invasions. As the scale of crypto assets grows, the violent risks targeting holders in real life are gradually evolving from "marginal incidents" into a security issue that cannot be ignored.

Hot Posts About U.S. Bancorp (USB)

Mining_sLittleSheep

Mining_sLittleSheep

16 hours ago
Just last week, when the whole world was scolding "the bull market is over, it's all gone to zero," three "whales" sneaked in (actually swaggered in), sweeping up a total of 1.2 billion dollars in a single week. Yes, you read that right, 1.2 billion, in US dollars. Doesn't that seem off? What were you doing last week? Were you just following the crowd and complaining? Were you terrified into bed by that needle on the K-line chart? Were you quick to sell your blood-stained chips? Don't be shy to admit it. Because the Q1 data is out: retail investors net sold 62,000 BTC. Meanwhile, institutions bought back 69,000 BTC against the trend. Who took whose chips? --- Your supposed doomsday is their shopping festival. Let me break down how that 1.2 billion was spent, guaranteed to make you feel like a big brain after reading. First, our old friend, Strategy. This guy spent another 1 billion dollars last week, at an average of $71,902, buying 13,927 coins. You laugh, saying "He's trapped, he's on guard?" He glances back at you with a loving look: "Kid, I hold a total of 780k coins, accounting for 3.72% of the total supply." The key is, this money isn't borrowed; it's raised through preferred stock. That bald boss named Michael Saylor has turned Bitcoin into a printing press logic— as long as Bitcoin's annualized growth exceeds 2.05%, this game can run forever. Are you still fussing over whether to add an egg to tonight's dinner? He's playing an infinite cash flow game. Second, Bitmine. This is a tough guy, focused solely on ETH. Spending 156 million dollars, buying over 70k ETH. The goal is clear: to acquire 5% of Ethereum's total circulating supply. What is this? It's the institutional version of Saylor. What are they trying to do? They want to lock ETH chips into a safe. Is your ETH still in your hands? Or have you swapped it for USDT and are preparing to run? Sorry, the little you have isn't enough for them to even pick their teeth. Third, BlackRock. This is the most terrifying. They didn't announce "I bought," but did something even more ruthless: withdrew 2,700 coins and 30k ETH from Coinbase, worth 236 million dollars, transferring into private custody wallets. In plain language: I took the goods from the "supermarket shelf" and put them into my cellar. What signal is this? It's saying: "I'm not selling these for the next two years. You guys can fight over the leftovers on the exchange." --- BTC 74K is not the end, it's the starting gun. Now the price is hovering around 74K. Tech folks will say this is resistance. Bullshit resistance. 74K at this point is a "cognitive watershed." Retail investors see 74K and think it's an unreachable mountain peak, a liberation zone from the last trap, and rush to escape. Institutions see 74K and think it's a discounted sale entry point. BlackRock's clients already treat Bitcoin as a "geopolitical hedge tool." What does that mean? It means that when wars break out here and explosions happen there, and fiat currencies depreciate like toilet paper, these people holding billions of dollars realize that nothing is safer, harder to confiscate, or more solid than Bitcoin. Do you think they'll buy gold? Gold still needs to be mined, transported, and verified for purity. Bitcoin? A USB drive, memorize 12 words, crossing borders is easier than breathing. It used to be that you couldn't buy because you had no money. Now, you have money but dare not buy. And these institutions? They are rich and are frantically grabbing. --- You might ask: So what should I do? Chase the high now? My advice is one sentence: if the coins you hold are the kind you'd die if you didn't sell tomorrow, then yes, you should be anxious. But if you're holding spare money, or even believe that this world will eventually go digital and decentralized, then just delete the app and do whatever you want. This round of institutional entry is different from before. Before it was "to harvest the leeks," now it's "to lock in positions." When BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, starts moving coins into cold wallets, and Strategy, a listed company, puts the money raised from issuing stocks into Bitcoin, you should feel a kind of fear—a fear that missing out is more painful than losing money. Tell me: Do you still have coins in your hands? Or at this 74k level, have you already handed over your bullets? #美军封锁霍尔木兹海峡 #Gate广场四月发帖挑战 $BTC $ETH
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rugpull_ptsd

rugpull_ptsd

04-13 14:29
Been diving deep into the privacy wallet landscape lately, and I've noticed something interesting—there's way more nuance to this space than most people realize. Everyone talks about staying anonymous in crypto, but the truth is that different wallets solve different problems. Let me share what I've been looking at. First off, if you're serious about an anonymous bitcoin wallet setup, you've got to understand the fundamental split: hardware vs software, and how much complexity you're actually comfortable with. I used to think it was just about picking a name off a list, but it's really about matching your threat model to the right tool. Tangem caught my attention because it flips the script on seed phrases entirely. Instead of writing down 12 or 24 words like it's 2015, you get NFC cards with your private keys embedded in a secure chip. No KYC, no account creation, just offline setup. The hardware runs $54.90 for a 2-card set up to $139.80 for a family pack, and honestly, the 25-year warranty on the secure element is wild. For people who want simplicity without sacrificing self-custody, this is compelling. The cards support thousands of cryptocurrencies across multiple chains. Now, if you're the type who cares deeply about transparency and open-source verification, Trezor remains a solid choice. It's been around forever, and for good reason—the firmware is open, the security model is built on verification rather than closed-box trust. You're looking at $49 for the Model One or $129 for the Model T. What appeals to me here is that you actually understand what's running on your device. The integration with tools like MetaMask and Sparrow gives you flexibility without forcing you into one ecosystem. For people managing serious portfolio diversity, Ledger Stax is the premium play. Five thousand plus supported assets across major chains, built-in swaps and staking through Ledger Live, and a curved E-Ink screen that actually looks nice. Yes, it's $399, but if you're holding multiple chains and want institutional-grade hardware security, the UX alone justifies it. The CC EAL5+ certified secure element keeps your keys offline and isolated. Here's where it gets interesting though—if you're paranoid about connectivity vectors, Ellipal operates in complete air-gap mode. No USB, no Bluetooth, no Wi-Fi. Everything happens through QR codes. The Titan 2.0 is $169, or you can go budget with the Titan Mini at $79. For someone who genuinely believes wireless connections are an attack surface, this level of isolation is appealing. It's not for everyone, but it's a valid approach. Bitcoin-specific tools deserve their own category. If you're running an anonymous bitcoin wallet focused purely on BTC and you want granular control, Sparrow is where technical users live. CoinJoin integration, Tor routing, multisig support, full UTXO management—this is power-user territory. It's free software, desktop-only, and it assumes you know what you're doing. Wasabi takes a different angle, automating the CoinJoin process and running over Tor by default, but it charges coordination fees and requires patience. Electrum is the veteran—lightweight, flexible, works across Windows/Mac/Linux/Android, and integrates with hardware wallets seamlessly. For the multisig crowd, Nunchuk is doing something interesting with distributed key management. You can set up scenarios where multiple devices or people need to approve transactions. It's self-custodial, supports hardware wallet integration, and appeals to families, teams, or anyone who wants redundancy beyond a single point of failure. If you want simplicity with multi-chain support, Exodus and Atomic Wallet occupy similar territory. Both are non-custodial, no KYC required, and they embed swaps and staking directly into the interface. Exodus is available on desktop and mobile with nice syncing, while Atomic emphasizes atomic swaps and token management. Neither requires personal details, and both keep your private keys locally encrypted on your device. The trade-off is that they're hot wallets, so security depends on your device hygiene. Here's what I think people miss: choosing an anonymous bitcoin wallet or any privacy wallet isn't about finding the "best" one objectively. It's about understanding your actual use case. Are you holding for years? Hardware wallet. Daily trading? Hot wallet with good UX. Bitcoin maximalist who cares about transaction privacy? Sparrow or Wasabi. New to this and want something beginner-friendly? Exodus or Tangem. Institutional setup with shared custody? Nunchuk. The reliability question comes up a lot, and honestly, it depends entirely on you. These wallets are secure when used correctly, but there's no safety net. No customer service reversing transactions, no account recovery if you lose your seed phrase. Phishing, malware, fake apps on app stores—these remain real threats. The safety checklist is boring but essential: hardware wallet for large amounts, verify URLs obsessively, store recovery phrases offline in physical form, use strong passwords, keep devices updated. One thing that's shifted my thinking is recognizing that anonymity exists on a spectrum. Blockchains are transparent, and on-chain analysis can still link activity even if your wallet doesn't know your name. So the best approach combines privacy tools with disciplined operational security. Separate your spending wallet from your long-term holdings. Use Tor when appropriate. Understand that the wallet is just one piece of the puzzle. Looking at the broader landscape in 2026, I'd say Trezor still edges out as the top pick for most people—it balances self-custody, transparency, multi-chain support, and security without requiring you to be a technical wizard. But that recommendation changes immediately if your priorities shift. Want seedless simplicity? Tangem. Want maximum Bitcoin privacy? Wasabi or Sparrow. Want all-in-one convenience? Exodus or Atomic. Want air-gapped isolation? Ellipal. The market's matured enough that there's genuinely a right answer for different people. The key takeaway: stop thinking about privacy wallets as a single category and start thinking about them as tools designed for specific threat models and use cases. Once you nail down what you actually need—not what sounds cool—the choice becomes obvious.
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LayerZeroEnjoyer

LayerZeroEnjoyer

04-13 07:03
Been deep in the crypto space long enough to see how wallet security has evolved, and I gotta say, the options for anonymous crypto wallet solutions have gotten way better. Let me break down what's actually worth your attention in 2026. First thing - if you're serious about privacy, you need to understand the difference between self-custodial wallets and exchange wallets. With a real anonymous crypto wallet, you control the keys. Full stop. No platform can freeze your funds, no KYC nonsense, no identity verification required. That's the whole point. For hardware cold storage, Trezor remains the gold standard if you value transparency. Open-source firmware, offline key generation, PIN protection - the basics done right. Around $49-$129 depending on the model. If you want something more modern with a touchscreen, Ledger Stax works well for managing diverse portfolios across multiple chains. Costs $399, but the security model is solid. Now, if you're paranoid about connectivity (and honestly, you should be), Ellipal operates completely air-gapped using QR codes for signing. No USB, no Bluetooth, nothing. That's genuinely the most isolated setup you can get. Their Titan 2.0 is $169. Bitcoin-only users? Sparrow Wallet is the move if you want advanced privacy. CoinJoin integration, Tor routing, full UTXO control - this is for people who actually understand what they're doing. Free software, you just pay network fees. For something more beginner-friendly without sacrificing the anonymous crypto wallet principle, Exodus strikes a decent balance. Multi-chain support, built-in swaps, no KYC required. Software wallet though, so security depends on your device. Here's what actually matters when choosing: Does it require KYC? (It shouldn't.) Do you control the keys? (You must.) What's the security model? (Hardware > software, always.) What privacy tools does it include? (Tor, CoinJoin, air-gap capability?) Real talk though - no wallet is a magic solution. Your recovery phrase is everything. Lose it, you lose everything. Expose it, funds are gone instantly. Store it offline. Use a hardware wallet for anything substantial. And test with small amounts first. The best anonymous crypto wallet for you depends on your use case. Long-term hodler? Hardware wallet. Bitcoin privacy maximalist? Sparrow or Wasabi. Need multi-chain convenience? Exodus or Atomic. But whatever you choose, remember - with great privacy comes great responsibility. You're your own bank now.
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