Follow the TCF Financial CORP stock price and the full management transaction log of the company, a listed equity based in United States. Shares are quoted on US US, under the authority of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Finance & Banking sector, TCF Financial CORP has published 121 public disclosures. The latest transaction was filed on 9 June 2021 (Disposition). Among the most active insiders: Maass Brian W. Every trade is accessible without an account.
Informational score on this market. Our backtest validates the signal only on 8 EU venues; elsewhere (notably US markets) insider buys historically invert or do not hold. Not a recommendation.
Fundamental view, insider signal, bull and bear case, synthesis.
AI-generated analysis. Opinion, not investment advice. Not backtested. Built from public filings and financials. No price target, no buy or sell recommendation.
25 of 121 declarations
TCF Financial Corp. was a U.S. banking company listed on NASDAQ, operating in the United States prior to its acquisition by Huntington Bancshares, which closed on June 9, 2021. For French-speaking investors, TCF is best understood as a former regional banking platform whose history reflects the long-running consolidation of U.S. mid-cap banks. Its roots trace back to an early-20th-century banking franchise in the Midwest, and the company expanded over time through a mix of organic growth and acquisitions. Its historical headquarters was in Detroit, Michigan, while its corporate lineage also reflected the Chemical/TCF combination that had earlier linked it to Minneapolis. Operationally, TCF was a diversified commercial bank. Its core business lines included retail and business deposits, commercial lending, consumer banking, mortgage lending, and a range of specialty finance activities. The company served individual customers, small and medium-sized businesses, and middle-market clients. Its product set covered checking and savings accounts, lending products, mortgage solutions, credit cards, equipment finance, and commercial banking services. That made TCF a broad regional bank rather than a niche lender. In competitive terms, TCF operated in a crowded U.S. banking landscape dominated by large national institutions, regional peers, and community banks. Its relative strengths were its Midwest franchise, local customer relationships, and ability to deliver a full-service banking model at regional scale. At the same time, like most regional banks, it faced intense pressure from deposit competition, regulatory costs, low interest-rate cycles, and the need to keep investing in digital capabilities and branch-network efficiency. For investors following SEC Form 4 insider activity, the key point is that TCF is no longer an independent publicly traded company. Huntington Bancshares announced the all-stock merger in 2020 and completed it in 2021, after which TCF ceased to exist as a standalone listed issuer. That means any historical insider filings must be interpreted in the context of the pre-merger entity, not as current standalone trading activity. Overall, TCF Financial Corp. was a mid-sized U.S. regional bank with a broad retail and commercial banking franchise, a Midwest-focused footprint, and a history shaped by acquisitions and consolidation. As a stock-market reference today, it belongs more to banking history than to an active NYSE/NASDAQ listing.