Capital One's Brex Deal Is 'Compelling.' Why the Stock Is Falling Anyway. -- Barrons.com

Dow Jones
Jan 23

By Mackenzie Tatananni

Capital One Financial struck an agreement to acquire Brex, a fintech specializing in corporate credit cards, for nearly $5.2 billion. The deal is worth a second look, analysts say.

The purchase price, consisting of a roughly 50/50 split between cash and stock, represents around 3.5% of Capital One's market capitalization. The transaction is expected to close sometime in the middle of 2026.

Jefferies analyst John Hecht noted that the acquisition supports Capital One's aspirations in business payments. In his view, Brex offers "strategic benefits" including a cloud-native technology platform that is already using artificial intelligence for tasks such as expense auditing and fraud detection.

The company's high-quality customer base is another selling point, Hecht said. The Brex deal grants Capital One access to major tech and growth companies. Additionally, Brex oversees roughly $13 billion in commercial deposits, which could offer upside on funding costs and net interest margin.

Citi Research analyst Keith Horowitz was similarly upbeat, describing the combination as "compelling." Capital One's acquisition of Discover last year "added consumer card scale and network ownership, and Brex adds a foothold in the business payments space," Horowitz said.

Along with the deal announcement, the financial titan posted fourth-quarter earnings after the bell Thursday. Excluding charges from the Discover acquisition, adjusted earnings came to $3.86 a share, missing analysts' calls for $4.14. Revenue grew to $15.6 billion, up from $10.2 billion last year and above the $15.5 billion consensus estimate.

Shares fell modestly overnight and continued their descent with a slide of 4.3% in premarket trading Friday. Futures tracking the benchmark S&P 500 were down slightly.

Capital One CEO Richard Fairbank addressed the Brex deal on the earnings call. "Business payments have been a growing part of our strategy and investment agenda," he said, adding that the announcement "represents an important step change towards our business payments destination in a broader marketplace that we believe is ripe for reinvention."

Write to Mackenzie Tatananni at mackenzie.tatananni@barrons.com

This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

 

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January 23, 2026 08:52 ET (13:52 GMT)

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