With all the angst bearing down on Charles Schwab Corp., the brokerage may be worth a lot more without its bank.
That's the thinking of JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst Kenneth Worthington who argues Schwab shares would be valued more highly by investors if they were unencumbered by the risks around its bank following the tumult in regional lenders.
In such a scenario, the stock could trade at a 20 times earning multiple or $64 per share, he said, a notable premium to Friday's $53.80 close.
"Investors see a number of risks associated with the Schwab Bank — sorting risk, bank run risk, regulatory risk, and valuation risk," Worthington wrote in a research note Friday. "One way to address the bank risk is to de-bank."
Worthington's price target for Schwab in its current state stands at $85.
Schwab's Chief Executive Officer Walter Bettinger told CNBC on Friday that the company respects Worthington's view, but debanking "is not something we're going to look at in the short run."
"I don't think it would make sense to do long-term strategic moves based off what has been an extraordinary period of sort of unprecedented circumstances," Bettinger said.