Sunday, January 25, 2026

Should You Buy NAVN Stock After the Navan IPO?

It has been a hot year for IPOs, with companies from the fintech and crypto industries being the foremost names that have opted to go for the public route. As such, Navan’s (NAVN) IPO on Thursday, Oct. 30, has grabbed attention.

Founded in 2015 as TripActions and rebranded to Navan in 2023, the company offers an integrated platform for corporate travel management, expense management, and payments/corporate cards, all in one “super-app” for business travelers, travel managers, and finance teams. Its business model comprises usage-based fees from travel services and subscription fees from its expense management software. It also captures payment volume via its corporate card/payments offering.

Navan was looking to raise about $960 million by offering about 37 million shares at a price band of $24 to $26, implying a valuation of roughly $6.45 billion. Eventually, Navan (trading under the ticker NAVN) raised about $923 million, and its shares opened at $22, which was a 12% discount to the midpoint of the price range.

Now, with the listing out of the way, is Navan a viable investment bet? Let’s analyze.

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com

Navan’s financials follow a similar pattern as other standard IPO-bound companies: rising revenues, unprofitable but with shrinking losses, and improvement in some key metrics, with cash levels lower than its debt.

For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2025, revenues increased to $536.8 million from $402.3 million in the previous year. This was mirrored in the first six months of 2025 (ended July 31), with revenues of $329.4 million, up 29.8% from the year-ago period.

Loss from operations for FY 2025 was lower at $107.6 million compared to $246.3 million in FY 2024, and for the six months ended July 31, 2025, it was $28.2 million, lower than the previous year’s figure of $55.4 million. Overall, net loss attributable to shareholders shrank by an encouraging 46.2% in FY 2025 to $4 per share. However, for the first six months of 2025, it expanded to $2.15 per share from $2.05 per share, an unpleasant yet not-so-alarming development.

Although the company remains profitable at the gross level, it has yet to be profitable at the operational level, although the losses are certainly narrowing. Thus, instead of shooting for the bottom line, Navan should take a slow and steady approach and turn profitable at the operational level, as it will validate that the company can carry out its core business profitably.

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