USB

U.S. Bancorp Price

USB
$53,50
+$0,06(+%0,11)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-07 18:25 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-07 18:25, U.S. Bancorp (USB) is priced at $53,50, with a total market cap of $83,22B, a P/E ratio of 10,95, and a dividend yield of %3,84. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $53,17 and $53,81. The current price is %0,62 above the day's low and %0,57 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 1,44M. Over the past 52 weeks, USB has traded between $51,60 to $53,81, and the current price is -%0,57 away from the 52-week high.

USB Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$53,44
Market Cap$83,22B
Volume1,44M
P/E Ratio10,95
Dividend Yield (TTM)%3,84
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 Outstanding1,55B
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) 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)

token_therapist

token_therapist

18 minutes ago
Been thinking about this a lot lately - the difference between where you store your crypto actually matters way more than most people realize when they're just starting out. So here's the thing about a cold wallet: it's basically your offline fortress for digital assets. The core idea is dead simple - your private keys (think of them as the master password to your crypto) stay completely disconnected from the internet. No internet connection means no hackers, no phishing, no malware. It's like keeping your valuables in a safe that's literally unplugged from the world. When you compare this to hot wallets that exchanges offer - yeah, they're convenient since you can trade anytime - but they're also constantly exposed. That convenience comes with real risk. Your private key is the only thing that matters for accessing your assets, and if it gets compromised, that's it. There are basically two main types of cold wallet setups worth considering. Hardware wallets are physical devices, kind of like USB drives. You plug them in when you need to move crypto, then disconnect them. Something like Trezor or Ledger - these run anywhere from $29 to $400 depending on features. The pricier ones usually have better interfaces and support more tokens, but even the cheaper options provide solid security. Then there's the older school approach - paper wallets, which are literally just printouts of your keys. Old technology, but genuinely unhackable since there's no electronics involved. Only risk is physical loss or theft. If you're actually going to use a cold wallet, here's what matters: pick something from an established brand that's been tested in the real world. Don't cheap out too much on security just to save $50. Once you get it set up, immediately generate and safely store your recovery seed - that's your backup key if something happens to the device. Treat that seed like it's worth gold, because it basically is. Keep the physical wallet itself in a secure location, not just sitting in a drawer. The real advantage of a cold wallet is peace of mind if you're holding long-term. You own your keys, you control your assets, no middleman involved. Downside is they're inconvenient for active trading - you can't just quick-trade whenever you want. But if you're the type who buys and holds, this is genuinely the way to go. Security and ownership are worth the friction. The mistake people make is either losing their recovery information or not backing it up properly. Lose both your device and your seed, and your crypto might be gone for good. Also don't get lazy about where you physically store the thing. It's still a valuable piece of hardware. Costs are one-time usually - just the device price - unless something breaks. Most people agree it's worth it if you're serious about crypto for the long haul. The whole point is you're not trusting anyone else with your assets, which is kind of the whole reason we got into this space anyway.
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Falcon_Official

Falcon_Official

7 hours ago
#Gate广场四月发帖挑战 The Complete 2026 Playbook to Protect Your Crypto and On-Chain Assets In2026, Web3 is not a niche experiment. It is live financial infrastructure carrying billions of dollars daily across decentralized protocols, smart contracts, cross-chain bridges, and self-custody wallets. And where real money moves, sophisticated attackers follow. This guide breaks down everything you need to know to stay protected from individual users to founders building protocols. The Threat Landscape Has Changed: The nature of Web3 attacks in 2026 is fundamentally different from what the space faced five years ago. Attacks are faster, more targeted, and increasingly AI-assisted. The most damaging exploits are no longer just code vulnerabilities they are multi-layered attacks combining technical exploits with human psychology and social engineering. Key data points from the current threat environment: - Access control vulnerabilities alone were responsible for approximately **$953 million in losses in 2024**, a trend that has continued into 2026 - An overflow vulnerability in a single protocol (Truebit) resulted in a **$26.6 million exploit** in early 2026 - AI-enabled deepfakes and impersonation attacks have become a primary vector for targeting high-net-worth crypto holders and protocol founders - Supply chain attacks compromising developer tools, npm packages, and front-end repositories are among the fastest-growing categories The 10Critical Threats You Must Understand: 1. Social Engineering and Phishing Attackers are not breaking your wallet encryption they are breaking your judgment. Fake support messages, impersonated team members, spoofed exchange emails, and carefully crafted Discord DMs are designed to make you act before you think. Always verify independently. No legitimate protocol will ever ask for your seed phrase. 2. Address Poisoning Scams This attack involves sending tiny transactions from a wallet address that visually resembles one you have previously interacted with. When you copy-paste from transaction history, you copy the fake address instead. The result: funds sent to an attacker permanently. Always verify the full address character by character before confirming any transaction. 3. Impersonation and Pretexting Attackers research your on-chain activity, your social media presence, and your known connections to craft convincing false identities. They may pose as a VC, a protocol team member, an auditor, or even a fellow community member. In2026, AI makes these personas disturbingly convincing. If someone reaches out unsolicited about a "collaboration" or "opportunity," treat it as suspicious by default. 4. Malicious Browser Extensions Browser extensions with wallet permissions can silently intercept transactions, modify recipient addresses, or extract private keys. In 2026, malicious extensions disguised as productivity tools, price trackers, or even legitimate wallet helpers have been used in significant fund thefts. Review all extensions regularly. Use a dedicated browser for DeFi interactions. 5. Fake Airdrops and Giveaway Scams Fake airdrop claims that require wallet approvals, token swaps, or "gas fee" payments remain one of the most effective scam vectors. They exploit excitement and FOMO. If you did not sign up for an airdrop and something appears in your wallet, do not interact with it not even to reject it through an untrusted interface. 6. AI-Enabled Scams and Deepfakes This is the newest and most dangerous category for 2026. AI-generated voice calls, video deepfakes of founders or executives, and AI-written phishing content that is indistinguishable from legitimate communications have all been used in successful attacks. Verify any high-stakes communication through a second, independent channel before taking action. 7. Pig Butchering Romance Scams Long-game social manipulation where attackers build genuine-seeming personal relationships over weeks or months before introducing a "lucrative crypto opportunity." Losses in this category run into tens of millions. Awareness is the primary defense if a new online contact pivots the relationship toward crypto investment, that is a major red flag. 8. Scareware and Panic Tactics Fake security alerts, fake liquidation warnings, and fake "your account has been compromised" messages designed to force hasty action. Slow down. Verify through official channels only. Panic is the attack vector. 9. Baiting Schemes Physical or digital bait such as abandoned USB drives with "recovery phrase" files or QR codes in public places targeting both individual users and protocol teams. Physical security is part of Web3 security. 10. Developer Targeting and Supply Chain Attacks Targeting developers gives attackers leverage that scales. Compromising a developer's machine, credentials, or npm package can inject malicious code into protocols used by thousands of users. Multi-sig signers, DevOps personnel, and front-end deployers are high-value targets. Treat privileged developer identities like financial system access. Your Core Security Framework Non-Negotiable Practices: Hardware Wallet First: Store 80-90% of your crypto holdings in cold storage. Hardware wallets remain the most secure option for individual holders in 2026 because they keep private keys completely offline. Use hot wallets only for amounts actively needed in trading or DeFi. Seed Phrase Discipline: Never digitize your seed phrase. No cloud, no photo, no email. Write it physically and store it in multiple secure locations. A single compromised digital copy is a full loss event. Transaction Verification: Every transaction should be verified on the hardware wallet screen itself, not just the browser interface. Front-end interfaces can be compromised the wallet screen cannot be faked. Revoke Unused Approvals: Use on-chain approval management tools to regularly revoke token approvals for contracts you no longer use. Unlimited token approvals given months ago to a protocol that has since been compromised are still valid unless revoked. Multi-Sig for High-Value Holdings: For any significant holdings, multi-signature wallet setups requiring multiple independent approvals before any transaction executes dramatically reduce single-point-of-failure risk. Separate Wallets for Separate Activities: One wallet for DeFi interactions, one for NFTs, one for long-term cold storage. Compartmentalization limits blast radius if one wallet is compromised. DNS and Front-End Vigilance: Many losses happen at the UI layer, not the contract layer. Attackers hijack DNS records and serve fake front-ends that drain wallets on connection. Bookmark official URLs, verify SSL certificates, and monitor for DNS changes on protocols you use regularly. For Founders and Protocol Teams: Security is not a launch checklist item it is a full lifecycle responsibility. AI-powered preliminary audits, access control hardening, hardware keys for all privileged identities, and ongoing monitoring are baseline requirements in 2026. Most major losses do not happen because audits were skipped they happen because operational security failed after launch. The Core Principle: In Web3, you are your own bank, your own security team, and your own compliance department. That is the power of self-custody. It is also the responsibility. The protocols are open. The threats are real. The tools to protect yourself exist but you have to use them. Not your keys, not your coins. Not your verification habits, not your funds. Stay sharp. Stay safe. #Web3SecurityGuide #GateSquareAprilPostingChallenge Deadline: April 15th Details: https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/50520
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MemeEchoer

MemeEchoer

9 hours ago
I recently wondered whether it's really worth investing in a cold wallet. So I started researching seriously what’s going on with this and why so many people in the crypto space recommend it so highly. First, let’s clarify what a cold wallet actually is. Basically, it’s a physical device that stores your cryptocurrencies offline. No being online all the time like hot wallets. The security it offers is serious because it keeps your private keys completely isolated from any digital attack. Many people think that a wallet is where the coins are stored, but in reality, it works differently. Cryptocurrencies live on the blockchain. What a cold wallet does is manage your private keys in an offline environment. Those keys are the only thing you need to access your assets. Without them, no transaction is possible. Now, there are several options on the market. Ledger is probably the most well-known. Its devices are compact, USB stick-sized, with an OLED screen and metal protection. They support Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and many altcoins. Trezor is another solid option, one of the first to hit the market back in 2014. Quick setup, multiple coins, robust security. SafePal is also gaining traction, especially because it has significant investment backing in the ecosystem. The interface is intuitive and uses QR codes for communication, without touching the internet. What attracts me to cold wallets is that you have full control. You don’t depend on third parties, there’s no risk of an exchange going down or getting hacked. Your keys, your responsibility. That’s real power. But it’s not perfect either. Transferring funds requires extra steps. You need to connect the device, copy addresses, double-check. It’s not as fast as a hot wallet. And yes, they cost money, typically between $50 and $250. Also, if you lose the physical device or it gets damaged, you need to have your recovery phrases stored somewhere safe. What surprised me is that even cold wallets can be vulnerable to phishing if you’re not careful. But honestly, if you hold large amounts of crypto, the cost and complexity are totally worth it. It’s the most serious way to protect important assets. To transfer coins, it’s simple: copy the address from the device, send from your exchange or previous wallet, verify everything is correct, and that’s it. Three straightforward steps. If you’re unsure which to choose, the most recommended options remain Ledger Nano X, Trezor Model T, SafePal S1, and some others like Keystone Pro. Honestly, any of these cold wallets will give you the security you need to sleep peacefully with your coins stored.
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