Stock Yards Bancorp Receives Hold Rating from Analysts

Five investment firms rate the bank's stock as a Hold recommendation

Jan. 29, 2026 at 8:39am

Stock Yards Bancorp, Inc. (NASDAQ:SYBT) has received a consensus Hold rating from five investment analysts covering the stock. The analysts have an average 12-month price target of $81.50 on the stock.

Why it matters

The Hold rating and average price target from analysts provide insight into the current market sentiment around Stock Yards Bancorp. This can help investors and the company itself understand how the stock is perceived by the financial community.

The details

The five analysts covering Stock Yards Bancorp have all rated the stock as a Hold. No analysts have issued a Buy or Sell recommendation. The average 12-month price target among the analysts is $81.50 per share.

  • Stock Yards Bancorp reported its latest quarterly earnings on January 27, 2026.

The players

Stock Yards Bancorp, Inc.

A bank holding company headquartered in Louisville, Kentucky, operating through its subsidiary Stock Yards Bank & Trust Co. The company offers a full suite of banking services to individual consumers, small to mid-sized businesses, and municipalities.

Wall Street Zen

A research firm that recently raised its rating on Stock Yards Bancorp from Sell to Hold.

Hovde Group

A research firm that raised its price target on Stock Yards Bancorp from $73 to $75 and maintained a Market Perform rating.

Weiss Ratings

A research firm that reaffirmed a Hold (C) rating on Stock Yards Bancorp.

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What they’re saying

“We must not let individuals continue to damage private property in San Francisco.”

— Robert Jenkins, San Francisco resident (San Francisco Chronicle)

“Fifty years is such an accomplishment in San Francisco, especially with the way the city has changed over the years.”

— Gordon Edgar, grocery employee (Instagram)

What’s next

The judge in the case will decide on Tuesday whether or not to allow Walker Reed Quinn out on bail.

The takeaway

This case highlights growing concerns in the community about repeat offenders released on bail, raising questions about bail reform, public safety on SF streets, and if any special laws to govern autonomous vehicles in residential and commercial areas.