NI Holdings Trades Close to $14 After Board Filing

NI Holdings Trades Close to $14 After Board Filing

May 28, 2026

New York, May 28, 2026, 16:01 (EDT)

  • NI Holdings shares were flat late Thursday. The insurance ETF and a few other traded insurance names slipped.
  • A filing from May 26 shifted attention to governance. It did not bring a new earnings surprise.
  • The next thing for the stock is to see if a better first-quarter underwriting result holds up as the non-standard auto book keeps shrinking.

NI Holdings Inc. (NODK) stock was flat at about $14 in late trade Thursday. The Fargo-based insurer posted governance updates after its meeting. Investors kept an eye on whether first-quarter underwriting outperformance will continue.

NODK last changed hands at $14.02 in late Nasdaq action, off 2 cents. Shares moved between $13.88 and $14.30. About 8,144 shares traded, with the insurer’s market cap around $293.5 million.

Timing is important here since this wasn’t a claim cost hit or a capital step, but just an 8-K filing. That’s the form companies file with the SEC for material events. NI said shareholders picked eight directors at the May 19 annual meeting, kept Forvis Mazars as auditor for 2026, and backed executive pay in a non-binding vote. That vote gives the board a signal from investors but doesn’t require them to act.

Dana J. Kaldor and Callie J. Thomas are now confirmed as independent directors under Nasdaq Capital Market rules, according to the filing. Each received 5,015 restricted stock units on May 20 through the company’s regular non-employee director compensation plan, the filing said.

NI’s first quarter numbers are the main story. Net income came in at $12.5 million, up from $6.5 million a year ago. Basic EPS rose to 60 cents from 31 cents. Gross premiums written dropped 15.1% to $57.5 million as NI pulled back from most non-standard auto insurance, which targets higher-risk drivers.

The company posted a combined ratio of 79.7%, tighter than the 94.4% it put up earlier. A combined ratio compares claims and costs to premiums—insurers are in the black before investment income when it drops below 100%.

NI Holdings president and CEO Cindy Launer said in the company’s May report that “2026 is off to a solid start.” She added that premiums “declined as expected” because NI Holdings moved out of non-standard auto. GlobeNewswire

NI reported in its quarterly filing that net earned premiums in non-standard auto dropped 85.7% year over year. More cuts are expected as it continues to run off that business—policies are rolling off and not renewed. Home and Farm net earned premiums climbed 8.3%, driven by new business in North Dakota and South Dakota, rate hikes, and higher property values.

NI, an insurance holding company, has five subsidiaries that write property and casualty insurance. Products include private and non-standard auto, homeowners, farmowners, crop hail, federal multi-peril crop, and commercial lines.

The stock outperformed some peer insurers late Thursday. Donegal Group edged down 0.2%, Heritage Insurance dropped 0.9% and United Fire Group slid 1.2%. The SPDR S&P Insurance ETF, which tracks U.S. insurance companies, was off roughly 1.0%.

But there’s a clear risk. Higher weather losses, too-low reserves, rising reinsurance costs or less non-standard auto could all push the first-quarter combined ratio higher. NI reported operating cash flow used $1.9 million in the quarter, down from $9.9 million generated last year. The company said this was mainly from the non-standard auto exit cutting premium cash receipts.

Right now, the stock move is basically a holding pattern, not a rerating. The latest update is governance. But underwriting remains the main story.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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