New York, May 20, 2026, 2:06 PM EDT
Oportun Financial Corp. shares gained 2.9% to $5.40 on Wednesday afternoon, near the session high of $5.41, with volume at roughly 191,000 shares. The stock started the day at $5.27 and touched a low of $5.18.
Oportun shares moved even though there was no new company news in the past couple days. The investor site for Oportun shows May 7 as the last news release and May 14 for its latest presentation. The SEC page lists a May 8 10-Q as the last quarterly filing.
No holiday catch-up was in play. Nasdaq’s standard hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern. The calendar shows the next market closure isn’t until Memorial Day, May 25.
The moves were broad. LendingClub added 3.3%, with Upstart up 3.4% and OneMain ahead by 2.4%. The iShares Russell 2000 Index Fund, seen as a guide for small stocks, climbed 2.3%. The Financial Select Sector SPDR fund posted a 1.0% gain.
Oportun’s backdrop right now is its May earnings reset. The lender posted first-quarter revenue of $229 million, net income of $2.3 million, and 5 cents in diluted GAAP EPS. Adjusted EPS was 21 cents. CEO Doug Bland said “there is more work ahead” on credit. Interim CFO Paul Appleton said Oportun would “ramp originations” and keep “credit discipline.” Oportun Financial Corporation
Oportun’s May deck lays out what investors have on their radar for the back half. The lender said 79% of Q1 originations came from returning members, up from 63% the prior year. Oportun plans to roll out its V13 credit model for new borrowers in Q2 and returning borrowers in Q3. The company is also pushing ahead with risk-based pricing, where loan rates vary by borrower risk, to lend at rates above 36% to higher-risk borrowers.
Oportun’s credit quality remains mixed. The company’s 10-Q put the annualized net charge-off rate at 12.7%, up from 12.2%. Oportun blamed higher costs for food, fuel, and rent, and called out macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty as pressure on its customers. Loans 30 days past due dropped to 4.5% from 4.7%. Even so, Oportun’s filing said there was no guarantee its credit-risk steps would stop a negative impact on results.
OPRT stays in a tight range. The jump follows gains in other consumer-credit names and management’s recent focus on profit margins, but investors are still watching for better credit performance and fresh loan growth. The price move on Wednesday is only a sign so far, not solid evidence of a wider turnaround.