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New York Community Bancorp Stock: Buy, Sell, or Hold?

Share prices of New York Community Bancorp (NYSE: NYCB) have fallen roughly 70% over the past year. In the first-quarter 2024 earnings update, the first bullet point in management's comments was that the company is targeting "peer level profitability by fourth quarter 2026."

Given the huge stock decline, the below-peer performance, and a target date for improving financials, interested investors have a tough decision about what to do with this stock. Is it a buy, sell, or hold?

All signs point to NYCB being a turnaround stock. But potential investors should tread carefully. Here's what needs to be considered.

Buy New York Community Bancorp

Turnaround investing is something of a risky niche on Wall Street. It means buying a company with problems in the hope that it will be able to fix them. There are several challenges dogging New York Community Bancorp right now. Given the steep price decline, there is a potential upside here if management can get the bank back on track.

A person standing with a U-turn symbol on the ground in from of them.
Image source: Getty Images.

There's a lot of work to be done before any turnaround can happen. The bank has grown via acquisition and is now larger than it was just a few years ago. Bigger banks are subject to more regulatory scrutiny than smaller banks. New York Community Bancorp wasn't ready for the added oversight and has had to quickly adjust. That required it to bring in employees with the needed expertise and rapidly shore up the bank's finances so it could meet regulatory requirements.

Bolstering the balance sheet led to a massive dividend cut, with the quarterly dividend falling from $0.17 per share to $0.01 in less than a year. This aggressive move was also necessitated by the fact that some large loans the company made ran into trouble. There were no easy answers, so management took drastic measures. The list of drastic measures included securing a $1 billion bailout from private investors.

The good news here is that the bailout should provide management with the means to get back on track, assuming there's little additional bad news on the horizon (like more large troubled loans). So if you have a strong stomach and like to track your investments closely, this turnaround story might be worth a look based on the steps the company has taken to right the ship.

Hold New York Community Bancorp

If you bought New York Community Bancorp before the big stock decline, then you are likely sitting on significant losses. There's probably no point selling now unless you want to harvest those losses to offset gains elsewhere in your portfolio. After all, the company appears to be past the worst of the bad news now that it has secured additional funding. It seems highly likely at this point that it will rebound eventually.