Figure Gets Mixed Wall Street Debut As Kbw, Bofa Diverge On Outlook
- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW) initiated coverage of Figure with an “outperform” rating and a 12-month price target of $48.50, suggesting 17.5% upside.
- Founded by former SoFi CEO Mike Cagney, Figure went public in September and has climbed 12% since its IPO.
- KBW sees Figure’s tech stack as underutilized and capable of supporting a wider range of credit assets, such as first-lien mortgages and personal loans.
- It also pointed to upside from products like Figure Exchange and a tokenization tool for third-party assets.
What Happened
Two major Wall Street investment banks have issued differing views on the newly public fintech firm Figure (FIGR), as the company works to expand its blockchain-based lending and capital markets platform beyond home equity lines of credit.
Founded by former SoFi CEO Mike Cagney, Figure went public in September and has climbed 12% since its IPO. Its core business tokenizes HELOCs and connects borrowers to investors through a vertically integrated platform that includes loan origination, distribution and a digital asset marketplace.
Market Context
Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW) initiated coverage of Figure with an “outperform” rating and a 12-month price target of $48.50, suggesting 17.5% upside. The bank praised Figure’s early dominance in tokenized credit markets, where it holds 73% of the private credit segment and 39% of all tokenized real-world assets, according to KBW’s estimates.
KBW sees Figure’s tech stack as underutilized and capable of supporting a wider range of credit assets, such as first-lien mortgages and personal loans. It also pointed to upside from products like Figure Exchange and a tokenization tool for third-party assets.
Another broker, Bernstein, earlier initiated coverage on the stock with a more upbeat outlook. It rates Figure as an "outperform" with $54 price target, citing that the firm is doing for lending what stablecoins did for payments, tokenizing traditional assets to make markets faster and more efficient.
Read more: Figure Is a Blockchain Pioneer in Credit Markets, Says Bernstein, Initiating at Outperform
It initiated coverage with a “neutral” rating and a $41 price target, citing risks around execution, regulation and Figure’s dependence on its HELOC business, which still generates most of its profits and is not yet fully blockchain-native.
BofA sees Figure Connect — a new marketplace that helps lenders match with capital providers — as the company’s next growth driver. The bank expects it to account for 75% of the firm’s total revenue growth between 2024 and 2027.
The difference in price targets — $48.50 from KBW versus $41 from BofA — reflects the uncertainty surrounding whether Figure’s blockchain infrastructure can transition from a niche use to a more central role in modern finance.
Read more: Blockchain-Based Lender Figure Prices IPO at $25 Per Share, Raising Nearly $788M
Why It Matters
The flipside
Bank of America, however, took a more cautious view.
Details
While both banks acknowledged Figure’s leadership in a neglected corner of consumer lending, they diverged on how easily the company can scale into a broader fintech platform. BofA cited possible roadblocks onboarding large institutions, competition from other tech providers and changing regulatory rules, including updates to the Truth in Lending Act.