Tomorrow is the Ex-Dividend Date of Hope Bancorp, the Company Would Pay a Dividend of $0.14

Thursday, May 1, 2025 6:30 am ET1min read

Tomorrow(5/2/2025) is the ex-dividend date of Hope Bancorp(HOPE), Hope Bancorp would pay a dividend of $0.14 on 5/16/2025.

CodeCompanyDividend Per ShareDeclaration DateEX-Dividend DateHolder-of-Record datePayment DateSpecial Dividend
HOPEHope Bancorp$0.142025-04-182025-05-022025-05-022025-05-16No
HOPEHope Bancorp$0.142025-01-272025-02-062025-02-062025-02-20No
HOPEHope Bancorp$0.142024-10-282024-11-072024-11-072024-11-21No
HOPEHope Bancorp$0.142024-07-292024-08-082024-08-082024-08-22No
HOPEHope Bancorp$0.142024-04-292024-05-082024-05-092024-05-23No
HOPEHope Bancorp$0.142024-01-302024-02-082024-02-092024-02-23No

*The ex-dividend date is the trading date on and after which the dividend is not owed to a new buyer of the stock. The ex-dividend date is one business day before the date of record.
*The date of record is the day on which the company checks its records to identify shareholders of the company.

[Recent Performance]
The latest share price of Hope Bancorp was $9.97, up 0.00% in the last 5 trading days.

[Company Profile]
Hope Bancorp, Inc. is a bank holding company headquartered in Los Angeles, California. It offers commercial banking loan and deposit products through its wholly owned subsidiary, BBCN Bank, a California state-chartered bank. BBCN Bank primarily focuses its business in Korean communities in California, New York City metropolitan area, New Jersey, Chicago and Seattle. BBCN Bancorp, Inc., formerly named Nara Bancorp, Inc., was formed to become the holding company for Nara Bank effective in February 2002. Its principal business activities are conducted through BBCN Bank and primarily consist of earning interest on loans and investment securities that are funded by customer deposits and other borrowings. Operating revenues consist of the difference between interest received and interest paid, gains and losses on the sale of financial assets, and fees earned for financial services provided. Interest rates are highly sensitive to many factors that are beyond its control, such as general economic conditions, new legislation affecting the banking industry, and the policies of various governmental and regulatory authorities.

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