Navan, Inc. (NASDAQ:NAVN – Get Free Report) CEO Ariel Cohen sold 151,007 shares of the stock in a transaction that occurred on Friday, March 20th. The shares were sold at an average price of $8.62, for a total transaction of $1,301,680.34. Following the transaction, the chief executive officer directly owned 1,003,918 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $8,653,773.16. This represents a 13.08% decrease in their ownership of the stock. The transaction was disclosed in a document filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which is available at this hyperlink.
Navan Stock Down 4.3%
Shares of NAVN stock opened at $8.51 on Wednesday. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.14, a quick ratio of 4.49 and a current ratio of 4.49. The stock has a market cap of $2.12 billion and a price-to-earnings ratio of -4.34. The business’s 50 day moving average is $11.04. Navan, Inc. has a 12-month low of $8.10 and a 12-month high of $22.75.
Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades
Several brokerages have issued reports on NAVN. Jefferies Financial Group set a $20.00 target price on Navan in a research note on Tuesday, December 16th. Morgan Stanley reiterated an “overweight” rating and set a $20.00 price target on shares of Navan in a research note on Tuesday, December 16th. BMO Capital Markets initiated coverage on Navan in a report on Tuesday, March 17th. They issued an “outperform” rating and a $13.00 price objective for the company. Rosenblatt Securities lowered their price objective on Navan from $30.00 to $20.00 and set a “buy” rating on the stock in a research note on Monday. Finally, Weiss Ratings assumed coverage on shares of Navan in a report on Tuesday, January 27th. They set a “sell (d)” rating on the stock. One research analyst has rated the stock with a Strong Buy rating, twelve have given a Buy rating, one has assigned a Hold rating and one has given a Sell rating to the company’s stock. According to data from MarketBeat, Navan currently has a consensus rating of “Moderate Buy” and a consensus price target of $22.58.
Key Headlines Impacting Navan
Here are the key news stories impacting Navan this week:
- Positive Sentiment: AI and earnings focus — coverage highlights that Navan’s AI initiatives could help offset weakness in the broader software sector and may be a focal point in upcoming results, which could support upside if management shows traction or clear cost leverage. Read More.
- Positive Sentiment: Product/technology development — Navan plans to launch an “agentic” TravelClaw layer (AI-driven travel agent capabilities). New product layers that improve automation and trip management could strengthen competitive positioning and revenue mix if adoption accelerates. Read More.
- Neutral Sentiment: Analyst action mixed — Rosenblatt cut its price target from $30 to $20 but kept a “buy” rating; that reduces upside expectations from earlier levels but still signals conviction from that shop. This is a mixed catalyst: less bullish guidance from analysts, but not a sell rating. Read More.
- Neutral Sentiment: Short‑interest reporting appears anomalous — multiple notes show short interest as zero or NaN with a 0.0 days‑to‑cover ratio, suggesting data/reporting noise rather than a material short squeeze or buildup. This likely has limited informational value for near‑term price moves.
- Negative Sentiment: Surge in class‑action and law‑firm alerts — numerous firms (Pomerantz, Hagens Berman, Robbins Geller, Schall, Faruqi, Rosen, etc.) have announced or are soliciting lead plaintiffs in a securities‑fraud suit tied to the October 2025 IPO, alleging disclosure omissions (notably around rising sales & marketing expenses). The volume of litigation notices increases legal overhang, raises potential liability and settlement risk, and is a clear near‑term negative for sentiment. Read More.
- Negative Sentiment: Executive liability allegation — Levi & Korsinsky highlights potential personal liability for the CEO and CFO related to alleged IPO losses, which can amplify downside risk if plaintiffs name executives and push for sizable damages or settlements. Read More.
Institutional Investors Weigh In On Navan
A number of hedge funds and other institutional investors have recently bought and sold shares of NAVN. Royal Bank of Canada bought a new position in shares of Navan in the fourth quarter worth $35,000. California State Teachers Retirement System purchased a new position in shares of Navan in the fourth quarter valued at $39,000. Russell Investments Group Ltd. bought a new stake in shares of Navan during the 4th quarter valued at $51,000. New York State Common Retirement Fund bought a new stake in shares of Navan during the 4th quarter valued at $101,000. Finally, Strs Ohio purchased a new stake in Navan during the 4th quarter worth about $113,000.
About Navan
Navan (NASDAQ: NAVN) is a technology company that provides an integrated platform for corporate travel, expense management and business payments. The company combines online travel booking and itinerary management with expense reporting, corporate card services and payment processing to help organizations consolidate travel and T&E (travel and expense) workflows into a single system. Navan emphasizes a mobile-first user experience, automated reconciliation and policy controls to simplify administrative processes for finance and travel teams while improving the experience for travelers.
Navan’s offerings typically include online and mobile travel booking, real-time traveler support and duty-of-care features, automated expense capture and reporting, corporate card and virtual card issuance, and tools for payments and invoice management.
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