Axos Financial Inc
NYSE:AX
Shareholder Yield
Current shareholder yield for
AX is
hidden
.
Shareholder yield represents the total return a company provides to its shareholders, calculated as the sum of dividend yield, buyback yield, and debt paydown yield. What is shareholder yield?
Peers Comparison
Shareholder Yield
Buybacks
Buyback Yield measures how much a company reduces its outstanding shares through repurchases, expressed as a percentage.
This metric directly reflects the company’s efforts to return value to shareholders. By reducing the number of shares, buybacks can increase earnings per share and potentially boost the stock's price.
Peers Comparison
Buybacks
Debt Paydown
Not Applicable
Due to the unique financial structures and regulatory environments of banks and insurance companies, the Debt Paydown metric is not applicable for Axos Financial Inc.
These institutions manage liabilities differently, focusing more on regulatory compliance and operational liabilities than traditional debt management, making standard debt paydown calculations irrelevant.
Price Appreciation
AX Price
Axos Financial Inc
| Average Annual Return | 15.06% |
| Standard Deviation of Annual Returns | 33.21% |
| Max Drawdown | -46% |
| Market Capitalization | 5.5B USD |
| Shares Outstanding | 56 680 000 |
| Percentage of Shares Shorted | 5.71% |
AX Return Decomposition
Main factors of price return
Stock Splits
AX's latest stock split occurred on Nov 18, 2015
The company executed a 4-for-1 stock split, meaning that for every share held, investors received 4 new shares.
Before the split, AX traded at 83.29 per share. Afterward, the share price was about 19.89.
The adjusted shares began trading on Nov 18, 2015. This was the only stock split in AX's history.