New York, May 28, 2026, 13:02 EDT
NerdWallet Inc. climbed about 1% in midday trading on the Nasdaq Thursday, but the move left shares near the low end of their 52-week range. The stock last changed hands around $8.56 to $8.57 after starting the day at $8.49. NerdWallet’s 52-week low sits at $7.33, with a high at $16.24, according to .
This is key since the trade hinges less on a single new company update and more on if investors see NerdWallet keeping higher profit margins as pieces of its growth slow.
Stress in the consumer economy can hit an online financial-products marketplace from both sides. When pressure rises, more households check out loans, cards, banking and insurance. But if credit gets tighter or partners spend less on marketing, it’s tougher to turn that traffic into money.
NerdWallet’s latest Financial Resilience Index shows mixed consumer sentiment. The May reading, built from a Harris Poll of 2,072 U.S. adults, came in at 60.4 out of 100. About 37% said they’ll turn to credit to cover at least some expenses this month, while 66% expect a recession in the next year. “Moderate resilience, but plenty of room for growth,” said Elizabeth Renter, senior economist at NerdWallet. NerdWallet, Inc
The stock didn’t move much compared to other fintech and consumer finance names. LendingTree ticked up roughly 0.2%. SoFi Technologies added 3.7%.
NerdWallet’s first-quarter report showed revenue at $222.2 million, up 6% from last year. GAAP net income was $20.4 million. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $45.2 million. The company’s adjusted EBITDA metric strips out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and some other costs. Co-founder and CEO Tim Chen said demand for banking and personal loans helped make up for pressure in auto-insurance.
The company is guiding for second-quarter revenue in a range of $186 million to $202 million and adjusted EBITDA between $19 million and $27 million. That gives investors a clearer look at profits, but growth is still in question.
NerdWallet’s search traffic is still the catch. The company’s latest quarterly filing showed Consumer revenue climbed 10% to $197.6 million, but SMB revenue dropped 15% to $24.6 million. NerdWallet said pressure on consumer credit-card revenue came from lower “organic search traffic”—that’s unpaid hits from search engines. The filing also flagged inflation, rates, credit conditions, and how well it can boost traffic and monetization as risks for the business and stock. SEC
Wall Street’s reaction has been split. StockAnalysis data shows Jed Kelly of Oppenheimer lowered his price target to $12 from $15 but held his buy rating. Youssef Squali at Truist dropped his target to $15 from $18. Peter Christiansen at Citi cut his target to $11 from $13 and stuck with a hold rating.
Thursday’s move looks more like a check on valuation than a shift in the story. NerdWallet is making money and now has tighter cost controls, but investors are still waiting to see real gains in traffic and partner demand before pushing the stock up from the lows.