Treasury Yields Are at 4.42% and These 3 Digital Banks Under $50

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By Alex Sirois Published
Treasury Yields Are at 4.42% and These 3 Digital Banks Under $50

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Financial services stocks are quietly running one of the better setups in the market right now. The 10-year Treasury is parked at 4.42%, the 30-year is near 5.00%, and BEA data shows the financial sector generated $897.1 billion in profits in Q4 2025, up 9.6% year over year. Higher long rates are widening lending spreads while digital-first operators capture deposits cheaply. Sub-$50 entry points into this group are getting harder to dismiss.

With Synchrony Financial (NYSE:SYF | SYF Price Prediction) trading above our price ceiling, here are three financial services stocks under $50 where digitization and rates tailwinds are showing up in the numbers.

SoFi Technologies (NASDAQ: SOFI)

SoFi Technologies (NASDAQ:SOFI) is a digital one-stop financial services platform spanning lending, banking, brokerage, and stablecoins. At $18.47, SoFi offers high-growth fintech without a triple-digit price tag.

Q1 2026 revenue hit $1.10 billion, a 4.87% beat, while GAAP net income climbed 134.45% to $166.73 million. Loan originations set a record at $12.18 billion, up 68%, and deposits now fund over 90% of liabilities. Full-year 2026 guidance calls for roughly 30% revenue growth and $0.60 in adjusted EPS.

SoFi is compounding members at 35% annually with 43% of new products coming from existing members. CEO Anthony Noto framed it as “durable growth and strong returns, fueled by our relentless focus on innovation and brand building”. Reddit’s r/stocks recovery narrative pushed sentiment scores to 78 by May 10.

Technology Platform revenue fell 27% after a large client departure, and personal loan charge-offs ticked up to 3.03%. The lending and banking engines are doing the heavy lifting, and the digital franchise looks intact.

Ally Financial (NYSE: ALLY)

Ally Financial (NYSE:ALLY) is the largest all-digital bank in the U.S. and a top-tier auto lender. At $42, it sits under the ceiling with a real dividend attached.

Q1 2026 adjusted EPS came in at $1.11 versus $0.94 consensus, a 17.93% beat and Ally’s fourth straight quarter beating estimates. NIM ex-OID expanded 17 bps year over year to 3.52%, with management guiding to 3.60%–3.70% for the full year. Auto originations hit $11.50 billion on a record 4.4 million applications, while retail auto net charge-offs improved to 1.97%.

The rate environment is widening spreads on the auto book while Ally Bank pulls in cheap retail deposits, now $146 billion across 3.5 million customers and a 68th consecutive quarter of customer growth. CEO Michael Rhodes called the Focused. Forward. strategy a clear win. The $0.30 quarterly dividend and $147 million in buybacks add a capital-return kicker.

Tariff policy could pressure vehicle demand and residuals, and a sudden rate-cut cycle would compress that NIM tailwind. The credit trajectory and digital deposit moat blunt both concerns for now.

Fulton Financial (NASDAQ: FULT)

Fulton Financial (NASDAQ:FULT) is a Mid-Atlantic regional bank undergoing digital transformation called FultonFirst. At $21.84, it is the smallest name here, with a $4.06 billion market cap.

Q1 2026 operating EPS was $0.55 versus $0.49 expected, a 12.24% beat. NIM held at 3.58% as deposit costs fell 8 bps to 1.78%. On April 1, Fulton closed its Blue Foundry Bancorp acquisition, adding roughly $2.1 billion in assets and a New Jersey footprint. Analysts have a $23.00 price target on the name.

A regional bank using digitization to compete with the giants while higher rates protect spreads. FY2026 NII guidance of $1.12–$1.14 billion and FY2025 operating EPS growth of 17% show the model is working. A $0.19 quarterly dividend and roughly $126 million remaining on the buyback round out the return profile.

Provision for credit losses jumped to $14.4 million from $2.9 million, and C&I charge-offs doubled to $10.5 million. Integration of Blue Foundry adds execution risk. The deposit franchise and rate setup keep the thesis intact.

A low share price by itself is never a reason to buy a stock. Each of these names carries real operational and macro risks, and the financial services backdrop can shift quickly if the rate curve flattens or credit deteriorates faster than expected. Use this as a starting point, then dig into the filings, the guidance, and your own risk tolerance before committing capital.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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