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Why Toronto-Dominion Bank Is Down About 2%

Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD)(NYSE:TD), the largest bank in Canada as measured by assets, released its fourth-quarter earnings results yesterday, and its stock has responded by falling about 2% in early trading. Let?s take a closer look at the quarterly results and the fundamentals of its stock to determine if this decline represents a long-term buying opportunity.

The fourth-quarter results

Here?s a quick breakdown of 10 of the most notable financial statistics from TD Bank?s three-month period ended October 31, 2017, compared with the same period in 2016:

Metric

Q4 2017

Q4 2016

Change

Net interest income

$5,330 million

$5,072 million

5.1%

Non-interest income

$3,940 million

$3,673 million

7.3%

Total revenue

$9,270 million

$8,745 million

6.0%

Adjusted net income

$2,603 million

$2,347 million

10.9%

Adjusted diluted earnings per share (EPS)

$1.36

$1.22

11.5%

Total assets

$1,278,995 million

$1,176,967 million

8.7%

Total deposits

$832,824 million

$773,660 million

7.6%

Total loans, net of allowance for loan losses

$612,591 million

$585,656 million

4.6%

Total equity

$75,190 million

$72,564 million

2.3%

Book value per share

$37.76

$36.71

2.9%

Should you buy on the dip?

It was a very strong quarter overall for TD Bank, and it capped off a great fiscal year for the company, in which its revenue increased 5.3% to $36.15 billion, and its adjusted diluted EPS increased 13.7% to $5.55 compared with fiscal 2016. With these solid results in mind, I do not think the 2% drop in its stock is warranted, and I think it represents an attractive entry point for long-term investors for two fundamental reasons.

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First, it?s undervalued. TD Bank?s stock now trades at just 13.3 times fiscal 2017?s adjusted EPS of $5.55 and only 12.5 times fiscal 2018?s estimated adjusted EPS of $5.90, both of which are inexpensive given its current earnings-growth rate, its estimated 8.7% long-term earnings-growth rate, and the low-risk nature of its business model.

Second, it?s a dividend aristocrat. TD Bank currently pays a quarterly dividend of $0.60 per share, representing $2.40 per share annually, giving it a rich 3.3% yield. Investors must also note that fiscal 2017 marked the seventh consecutive year in which it had raised its annual dividend payment, and its 9.1% hike in March has it positioned for fiscal 2018 to mark the eighth consecutive year with an increase.

TD Bank?s stock is up over 13% since it released its third-quarter earnings results on August 31, and I think it is still a great long-term buy today, so take a closer look and consider initiating a position today.

More reading

Fool contributor Joseph Solitro has no position in any stocks mentioned.