- IPO Roadshow Launched: Navan announced on Oct. 21, 2025 that its Nasdaq IPO roadshow is underway. The company plans to offer 36.924 million Class A shares, including 30.0M new shares and 6.924M sold by existing investors [1] [2].
- Price Range & Raise: The expected price range is $24–$26 per share, implying a total raise of roughly $960 million [3] [4]. At the top of the range, Navan’s valuation would be about $6.45 billion – significantly below its $9.2B private valuation in 2022 [5] [6].
- Underwriters & Listing: Lead bookrunners are Goldman Sachs and Citi, with Jefferies, Mizuho and Morgan Stanley also on the deal [7]. Navan will list on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under ticker “NAVN” [8] [9].
- Use of Proceeds: A substantial portion of the IPO proceeds will be used to pay down debt – roughly $657 million of outstanding obligations [10]. (Navan disclosed ~$100M in short‐term notes and ~$195M in convertibles on its books [11].)
- Gov’t Shutdown Context: The IPO is proceeding amid a U.S. government shutdown. Navan is taking advantage of the SEC’s 20-day marketing exemption to move forward despite the suspension of formal IPO reviews [12] [13].
- Founders & Control: Co-founders Ariel Cohen (CEO) and Ilan Twig (CTO) will retain a large voting stake after the offering (roughly 24% and 43%, respectively [14]), giving them significant control over the company post-IPO.
Navan is a Palo Alto–based travel and expense management platform (formerly TripActions) that has expanded beyond corporate travel booking into payments and expense software. Its October IPO marks one of the first large travel-tech listings in 2025, aiming to capitalize on a rebounding business-travel market. In its S-1 filing, Navan projects about $537 million in revenue for 2024 (up from roughly $329M in H1 2025) [15], although it remains unprofitable due to high interest costs. At the proposed pricing, Navan would trade at roughly 13.8× trailing sales (8× 2026 forecast) [16], well above peer multiples (SAP’s Concur is about 7.9× trailing sales [17]). This suggests investors are pricing in aggressive growth.
IPO Details and Roadshow
Navan’s IPO filings confirm the planned price range and share count. As Reuters reports, “the firm plans to raise about $960 million by offering 36.92 million shares priced between $24 and $26 apiece,” with trading expected under symbol NAVN [18]. Business Travel News likewise notes the breakdown: 30M new Class A shares and 6.924M secondary shares, all priced $24–$26 [19]. The company has granted underwriters a 30‑day option for up to ~5.54M extra shares (15% greenshoe) to cover over-allotments [20] [21]. Lead managers are Goldman and Citi, alongside Jefferies, Mizuho and Morgan Stanley [22].
Navan’s roadshow formally kicked off in late October 2025 [23] [24]. (Navan’s BusinessWire release on Oct. 21 confirms the announcement of the roadshow [25].) The company expects to finalize pricing and begin trading by about Oct. 30, using the SEC’s special 20-day “testing-the-waters” rule for IPOs during the shutdown [26] [27]. This workaround – pioneered by Navan and others – has prompted a flurry of late-October listings.
Market Context: Shutdown and IPO Sentiment
Navan’s IPO comes as the broader U.S. IPO market is reawakening. After a lull, investors welcomed recent IPOs like Alliance Laundry and Phoenix Education [28]. However, market volatility and the government shutdown cast a shadow. Analysts note a split atmosphere: “IPOs activity during the shutdown has been stronger than expected,” says Gregor Feige (UBS), noting several companies decided “they’re simply tired of waiting” [29] [30]. UBS and others believe pent-up demand is driving the rush – the stock market remains near highs, and many issuers fear missing the narrow window before Thanksgiving.
At the same time, experts caution that market conditions could dampen demand. Reuters quotes IPOX CEO Josef Schuster: “The IPO comes amid heightened volatility in equities … we expect this to weigh on IPO demand going forward,” adding that issuers “need to be flexible” on pricing and terms [31]. In other words, while Navan’s pricing is aggressive, banks may need to allow a lower valuation or more favorable terms if sentiment sours. As Gibson Dunn partner Hillary Holmes observes, in the current environment “many are willing to accept a slightly lower valuation to get the deal done now,” since waiting longer introduces more uncertainty [32].
The shutdown has already delayed SEC review, so Navan’s S-1 had to be filed electronically via contractor EDGAR [33]. If regulators remain offline, Navan’s final approval may slip, pushing trading into November 2025. Even so, current filings show the company and certain insiders (including co-founders Cohen and Twig) raising capital now, using the IPO proceeds “to help pay down outstanding debt” [34] [35]. In fact, TS2’s analysis notes about $657 million of debt reduction is planned [36].
What Analysts Say (Stock Outlook)
Because Navan isn’t trading publicly yet, there are no official analyst price targets. Investors will compare Navan’s valuation to peers and its own history. Its $6.45B IPO cap is roughly two-thirds of its $9.2B 2022 private valuation [37]. Some market-watchers see this as prudent: given travel-tech multiples have contracted since 2022, the lower valuation and narrow price range may reflect a more disciplined market. IFR notes that at the top range ($26) Navan’s valuation-to-sales multiples are high — about 13.8× last 12 months of sales, versus ~7.9× for rival SAP Concur [38] — implying high growth is expected. If Navan fails to hit growth and profitability targets, critics warn the stock could underperform.
On the other hand, a successful IPO could spur a pop in NAVN. (Some private-market data even implied Navan’s shares were worth only ~$5 in September [39] – suggesting the public offering could jump as high as 4–5× the private price.) But experts caution that travel stocks can be volatile: fintech-to-travel plays like Expensify saw steep drops post-IPO in recent years. Thus, investor “confidence is likely to be buoyed” only if Navan shows strong fundamentals [40].
In interviews, IPO analysts stress caution and flexibility. Schuster (IPOX) advises that even if initial demand seems healthy, Navan “should be ready to sweeten the deal” if volatility lingers [41]. Meanwhile UBS’s Feige is more upbeat, noting the unusual environment has not crushed appetite: “The companies moving forward have likely done extensive testing-the-waters… while others are ready to move ahead sooner rather than later” [42].
Looking Ahead
Navan’s IPO will be watched as a barometer for late-2025 tech listings. If it prices near the top of the range (around $26) and markets stabilize, the stock could open strong on debut. But if broader IPO sentiment sours, Navan might leave money on the table. In any case, Google News readers should note Navan’s financials: the company has never turned a profit, and its burn rate is high due to debt interest [43]. Long-term investors will be watching whether Navan can leverage its integrated travel-and-expense platform to win enough corporate clients (like Lyft, Zoom and Shopify) to justify its lofty valuation.
Sources: Navan’s SEC filings and press releases [44] [45]; news reports by Reuters [46] [47], Business Travel News [48] and Investing.com [49]; market analysis by IFR [50] and TechStock² [51] [52]; plus expert quotes from UBS, IPOX, KPMG, and Gibson Dunn in Bloomberg/TradeAlgo coverage [53] [54] [55].
References
1. www.businesswire.com, 2. www.investing.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. ts2.tech, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.businesstravelnews.com, 7. www.businesswire.com, 8. www.businesswire.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. ts2.tech, 11. ts2.tech, 12. www.tradealgo.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.businesstravelnews.com, 15. ts2.tech, 16. www.ifre.com, 17. www.ifre.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.businesstravelnews.com, 20. www.businesswire.com, 21. www.investing.com, 22. www.businesswire.com, 23. www.investing.com, 24. www.businesswire.com, 25. www.businesswire.com, 26. www.tradealgo.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.tradealgo.com, 30. www.insurancejournal.com, 31. www.reuters.com, 32. www.tradealgo.com, 33. www.businesstravelnews.com, 34. www.tradealgo.com, 35. ts2.tech, 36. ts2.tech, 37. www.businesstravelnews.com, 38. www.ifre.com, 39. www.nasdaqprivatemarket.com, 40. www.insurancejournal.com, 41. www.reuters.com, 42. www.tradealgo.com, 43. ts2.tech, 44. www.businesswire.com, 45. www.businesstravelnews.com, 46. www.reuters.com, 47. www.reuters.com, 48. www.businesstravelnews.com, 49. www.investing.com, 50. www.ifre.com, 51. ts2.tech, 52. ts2.tech, 53. www.tradealgo.com, 54. www.reuters.com, 55. www.tradealgo.com