First Horizon holds the cleaner structural position, with the lead spread across growth and stability. The market setup is broadly comparable for both — no clear directional signal from price behavior. The market is not adding a decisive signal either way — the structural read carries the weight.
The comparison is based on similar long-term financial trajectories, not sector labels.
The lead is spread across growth and stability, rather than sitting in one isolated gap. The overall score gap is 13 points in favour of First Horizon Corporation.
Both operate in: Banks - Regional
This comparison is based on industry proximity, not on functional trajectory similarity. FHN and ISP.MI share the same industry classification.
For a similarity-based comparison, see how First Horizon and Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A each position within their functional peer groups in AssetNext.
Scores reflect position relative to comparable companies with similar long-term financial trajectories.
Score differences across key dimensions.
Left means cheaper relative valuation. Higher means stronger structure.
The setup stays mixed because structure and the price setup do not align cleanly in one direction.
Valuation position uses peer-relative PE percentile (idx_pct_pe) where available.
Revenue growth reinforces the category-level growth lead.
Stability also supports the lead, so the result is broader than one isolated gap.
The lead is built on both growth and stability, making it broader than a single-dimension result.
Break down the FHN vs ISP.MI comparison across all dimensions with the full interactive tool.
Explore how FHN and ISP.MI each compare against other companies in their peer groups.
Rule-based, descriptive analysis only. Derived from peer percentile dimensions. Not investment advice. Peer groups are determined algorithmically based on structural similarity — not by sector classification alone.
AssetNext scores reflect each company's structural position within its functional peer group — not a ranking against all stocks simultaneously. Peers are identified by similarity across eight financial dimensions, including revenue growth trajectory, margin structure, capital intensity, and earnings stability. A score of 75 means the company ranks in the top quartile within its own peer group, not the entire market.
Four dimension scores drive the overall peer score: Growth (revenue trajectory and expansion dynamics), Quality (margin structure and capital efficiency), Valuation (peer-relative pricing on standard multiples), and Stability (earnings consistency and financial predictability). Each dimension is scored 0–100 relative to the peer group, then combined into an overall peer score using equal weighting.
Scores are recalculated periodically as underlying financial data is updated. All analysis is descriptive and rule-based — AssetNext describes structural realities and never issues buy, sell or hold recommendations.