Toronto, May 25, 2026, 14:01 EDT
Propel Holdings Inc. shares were up 3.5% in Toronto afternoon trading Monday, adding to a five-day climb as investors looked back at the fintech lender’s May earnings. The stock last traded at C$21.67 as of 1:45 p.m. EDT, based on a delayed quote from the Toronto Stock Exchange.
This move landed during a regular Canadian session, but with U.S. markets off for Memorial Day, there was less cross-border news and domestic stocks moved mostly on local and TSX momentum. The Toronto Stock Exchange’s posted hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Toronto, while U.S. trading was on pause for the holiday.
S&P/TSX Composite Index hit a new record, rising 0.7% to 34,778.98 at 10:21 a.m. ET, Reuters said. Materials stocks led gains as investors looked at signs of U.S.-Iran talks. Propel isn’t in mining, but the positive move for Canadian shares helped the small financial stock, too.
Propel’s investor news page didn’t post a fresh Monday update. The latest posts were May 7 remarks from CEO Clive Kinross and a shareholder letter. Attention stayed on its Q1 results, higher dividend, and upcoming shareholder meetings.
Propel said Q1 revenue climbed to $166.1 million from $138.9 million last year, as the lender targeting consumers left out by big banks posted its latest results. Net income came in lower, dropping to $20.7 million from $23.5 million. The company, which runs Fora Credit, CreditFresh, MoneyKey and QuidMarket, reports all figures in U.S. dollars unless noted.
The company said total originations funded hit $199.3 million, up 30% from a year ago. Ending loan and advance balances were $592.7 million. Loan loss provisions came in at 45% of revenue, down from 56% in Q4.
Kinross said Propel has “strong momentum across the business” and still expects “continued profitable growth in 2026 and beyond.” The board lifted its annualized dividend to C$0.96 a share, up from C$0.90. A C$0.24 quarterly payout is due June 3 for holders of record on May 15. Newswire
Most analysts are backing the stock. Average 12-month target sits at C$30.75, according to Investing.com, with seven analysts calling it a buy and no sell ratings right now. The consensus could shift fast if credit quality slips.
The competitive read is mixed. Propel moves in the same general space as goeasy Ltd., another Canadian non-prime lender. Investors have been quick to punish lenders in this sector when credit quality or earnings slip. On May 13, Reuters said goeasy dropped 5.1% after posting a bigger loss than expected, showing how quickly this part of the market can turn when borrower stress increases.
The risk for Propel is clear. If jobless numbers go up, access to funding shrinks or loan delinquencies speed up, loan-loss provisions could jump and hit profits. Propel has already cautioned that real results may not match its outlook, citing risks in its annual filing.
Investors are eyeing if Monday’s stock gains stick through the session. Focus is also on whether management gives more detail on growth, credit, and capital returns at the annual general meeting June 2 and the shareholder and analyst presentation June 3.