Bank analytics, tailored to your role.
The same FFIEC call report and UBPR data, framed for the decision you actually need to make. Pick the page built for how you work.
For Bankers
Benchmark your bank against any peer group, track every UBPR ratio, and walk into the next board meeting with the numbers already done.
For Board Members
Plain-English metrics, peer context, and quarterly scorecards that turn a stack of regulatory filings into a five-minute read.
For Examiners
UBPR ratios, CAMELS indicators, asset-quality trends, and peer groups for all 4,500+ FDIC-insured institutions — ready before you open the file.
For Investors
Screen 4,500+ banks on any metric, rank the leaders and laggards, and pull 24 years of history into your model.
For M&A Advisors
Find acquisition targets and assess franchises on capital, deposit mix, credit quality, and growth — with the regulatory data already standardized.
For Consultants
Benchmark client banks against any peer set, build the analysis once, and export client-ready tearsheets — without maintaining your own data pipeline.
For Academics
Standardized quarterly call report and UBPR data on every FDIC-insured bank back to 2001 — with transparent methodology and CSV export.
For Journalists
Rankings, failure tracking, and per-bank numbers sourced straight from FFIEC filings — with the freshness date you can cite.
One dataset, every banking role
Every page above is powered by the same source: quarterly FFIEC call report and UBPR filings for all ~4,400 FDIC-insured US banks, standardized and refreshed each quarter. What changes is the framing — a board member needs plain-English scorecards and peer context, an examiner wants CAMELS indicators and asset-quality trends, an investor screens fundamentals and exports to CSV, and an M&A advisor sizes up deposit franchises.
Rather than make you relearn the platform for your job, each role page surfaces the metrics, comparisons, and exports that matter most for your work — backed by 24+ years of history and a transparent, published methodology you can cite. Not sure which fits? Start with the bankers or investors page; every view draws on the same underlying data.