Pacific Premier Bancorp, Inc. logo PPBI - Pacific Premier Bancorp, Inc.

Inactive Ticker PPBI is not actively trading. Quotes and analytics may be stale.
Price: -- -- | CONSENSUS: Hold DETAILS
STRONG
BUY
0
BUY 6
HOLD 8
SELL 0
STRONG
SELL
0
| PRICE TARGET: $32.67 DETAILS
HIGH: $41.00
LOW: $26.00
MEDIAN: $31.00
CONSENSUS: $32.67
UPSIDE: 33.40%
AlphaVal

AlphaVal

Deterministic, archetype-aware fair value

Banks, Insurers & Asset Managers 85% confidence

Primary model: P/Tangible Book × ROE Quality

Valuation Signal Fair Value Mild
Trading 0.3% below fair value
Current Price $24.49
Bear Case $17.19 29.8% downside ($17.19 - $24.49) / $24.49 = -29.8% ROTCE 5.9% → 0.30x TBV
Fair Value $24.56 0.3% upside ($24.56 - $24.49) / $24.49 = 0.3% ROTCE 7.9% → 0.58x TBV
Bull Case $31.93 30.4% upside ($31.93 - $24.49) / $24.49 = 30.4% ROTCE 9.0% → 0.76x TBV

Adjust Assumptions

7.9%
10.7%

Key Value Driver

ROTCE (7.9%) vs. cost of equity (10.7%)

Implied Market Multiple 1.17x

Plain-Language Summary

Our base-case estimate uses P/Tangible Book × ROE Quality. We then blend that result with the average analyst price target of $32.67 from 14 analysts, using a 20% weight on analyst consensus. That produces an estimated intrinsic value of $24.56 per share.

Warnings

Traditional cash flow models don't work well for banks — lending activity distorts how much cash the business actually generates.
Common valuation shortcuts don't apply here — for banks, interest payments are a core business cost, not overhead.
Return on equity (7.9%) is below the minimum investors require (10.7%). This means the bank is worth less than the net assets on its books.
Dividend-based valuation: $14.23 (37% below our primary estimate). Large gaps suggest the dividend may not fully reflect the company's value.
Wall Street's average price target is $32.67 (from 14 analysts). Our estimate is 31% below the consensus -- consider that gap carefully.

Key Risks

  • Book value quality matters as much as level — check loan loss reserves
  • Interest rate sensitivity creates non-linear earnings surprises
  • Insurance reserving is actuarial, not financial — errors emerge slowly