Princeton Bancorp, Inc (BPRN) Fair Value & Analysis
Financial Services · US · Market cap $255M
Fair value as of: Jun 26, 2026
Analysis
Princeton Bancorp, Inc (BPRN) currently trades at $37.41, while our model-based Fair Value estimate is $35.52 — implying the stock looks roughly 5.1% overvalued today. We read business quality at 95/100 (high quality), in the Financial Services sector. Bear case: priced above our estimate, the market already discounts strong expectations. Bull case: above-average quality can justify a premium — the entry price still matters most (evidence: high).
About the company
Princeton Bancorp, Inc. operates as the bank holding company for The Bank of Princeton that provides various banking products and services. The company accepts various deposit products, including checking, savings, attorney trust, and money market accounts, as well as certificates of deposit. It also offers traditional retail banking services, one-to-four-family residential mortgage loans, multi-family and commercial mortgage loans, construction loans, and commercial business loans, as well as consumer loans, including home equity loans and lines of credit. In addition, the company provides debit and credit cards, money orders, direct deposits, automated teller machines, cashier's checks, safe deposit boxes, online banking, wire transfers, night depository, remote deposit capture, bank-by-mail, online, and automated telephone banking services, as well as payroll-related services and merchant credit card processing services through third party. Further, it offers full online statemen…
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How we calculate Fair Value
Each company is valued through a stack of independent intrinsic-value models (DCF variants, residual-income, multiples and more), blended into one family-balanced consensus and weighted by how much trustworthy data backs it. A separate quality layer scores the fundamentals. Every input is real reported data — nothing guessed.
Educational research only · not financial advice · no buy/sell recommendation. Model-based estimates are not certainties; their reliability depends on data quality and assumptions.