Navient Shares Up as CEO Change Looms

Navient Shares Up as CEO Change Looms

May 21, 2026

NEW YORK, May 21, 2026, 14:07 (EDT)

Navient Corp NAVI was up in Thursday’s afternoon session, last changing hands at $8.53 for a gain of around 2.7%. Shares were just below the daily high of $8.54. Trading volume reached about 354,000 shares. Navient made the move without any new statement from the company Thursday.

Why now: Navient’s last update on its news page was a May 5 securitization, and its investor site put the latest 8-K and 10-Q at April 29. So traders are left with older news on loan growth, funding, and a CEO switch to guide them while watching today’s pricing.

Large-cap stocks edged higher with ETFs tracking the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 up roughly 0.4%. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF, which tracks small-caps, outperformed with a 1.2% gain.

Education finance and lending stocks traded unevenly. SLM Corp lost around 0.5%. Nelnet ticked up by about 0.2%. SoFi Technologies wavered between flat and a small decline.

Navient’s Q1 numbers, out April 29, showed GAAP net income at $17 million, or 17 cents a share. “Core Earnings” net income was a bit higher at $19 million, or 20 cents. Core earnings is Navient’s own profit metric, not GAAP. CEO David Yowan called out “strong momentum in high-quality loan growth.” Private education loan originations climbed 61% on the year to $818 million. Consumer lending net interest margin came in at 2.48%.

Funding is still a big part of this. Navient said on May 5 it finished a $550 million Navient Education Loan Trust 2026-A securitization, an asset-backed bond deal tied to student-loan payments and backed by Earnest-branded undergrad and grad loans. Navient said all classes sold out on day one of marketing.

Credit quality is still in focus. Following the earnings call, Barchart flagged that Seaport Research Partners analyst William Ryan wanted to know if better credit figures mean a new baseline. CFO Stephen Hauber told him Navient sees “further improvement” ahead, though reserves are still set for credit underperformance. Barchart

Navient said board chair Edward Bramson is set to take over as CEO on June 5. Yowan will leave his post as president and CEO but stay on the board. Yowan called it a “natural time” to return, mentioning the outsourcing of servicing, sale of the business-processing arm, and cuts to corporate functions. Bramson said he aims to finish “Phase 2” of the transformation. Navient Corporation

Wall Street is still cautious. StockAnalysis.com data put the consensus view at Hold from eight analysts, with an average target of $9.44. Some of the latest calls: TD Cowen is at Strong Sell, Barclays at Sell, and both Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan are at Hold.

The risks for Navient are clear. The company flagged inflation, interest rates, student-loan defaults, policy shifts around repayment or forgiveness, lower credit ratings, tougher funding markets, tech issues, and outside service problems in its filing. If credit recovery stalls or the funding market tightens for student-loan bonds, the stock move from Thursday could lose steam.

NAVI’s move does not seem tied to any one headline. The gain looks like traders are betting on Navient’s ability to ramp up Earnest loans, hang on to securitization access, and get through its CEO transition in June while keeping its restructuring plan going.

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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