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This Month's Exclusive News
LendingClub: A Digital Bank Growing Again Like a FintechAuthored by Peter Frank. Date Posted: 4/5/2026. 
Key Points
- LendingClub’s hybrid bank and marketplace model provides flexibility across credit cycles, which could smooth revenue streams.
- Strong growth, including 33% loan origination increases, highlights improving fundamentals despite market skepticism.
- Credit-cycle risk, competition, and earnings volatility remain key concerns for investors.
- Special Report: Elon’s “Hidden” Company
LendingClub (NYSE: LC) may be sorely underappreciated—if consumers keep borrowing and the company can fend off competition. Those are big ifs. But with strong recent financial results, a new chairman, and management optimism, the company appears to be making a compelling case that Wall Street hasn't fully caught up yet.
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In many ways, LendingClub has reinvented itself since acquiring a bank charter in 2021. Today it operates as a hybrid business: as a bank, it holds loans and earns net interest income; as a marketplace, it sells loans to institutional investors and earns capital-light fees. That dual model allows LendingClub to lean on whichever approach is more attractive during a given credit cycle. Strong 2025 Results Show MomentumBoth sides of the business scored big in 2025: fee-based loan originations grew 33%. In the fourth quarter alone, LendingClub originated $2.6 billion of loans, up 40% from the year-earlier period. On the banking side, net interest margin expanded to 5.98% from 5.42%. Overall, last year was a standout for the company. Total net revenue climbed 27% to $999 million, while net income more than doubled to $136 million from $51 million. Diluted earnings per share rose to $1.18 for the year, up from $0.46 in 2024. Although not the company's strongest quarter, the fourth quarter continued to show progress. Net income for the quarter hit $41.6 million, more than quadruple the $9.7 million earned a year earlier. Diluted earnings per share jumped from $0.08 to $0.35, slightly above expectations. Those results came on a 23% rise in quarterly net revenue to $266.5 million. Return on tangible common equity was a solid 11.9%. Management also noted that the company’s loan performance was running more than 40% better than that of competitors. Leadership Changes and Strategic ExpansionOther moves suggest a company either confident in its momentum or intent on capturing it. Days before the earnings release, the company announced that John C. (Hans) Morris would be replaced as chairman by Timothy J. Mayopoulos, the former CEO of Fannie Mae and former president of fintech company Blend, effective April 1. The company’s chief risk officer has also resigned. LendingClub signaled a bump in marketing spend in the first quarter and increased use of artificial intelligence in its lending business. The company also plans to enter the home improvement financing market. For the year, management guidance calls for originations between $11.6 billion and $12.6 billion and EPS of $1.65–$1.80. Market Skepticism Clouds the OutlookEven with strong quarterly and annual results, investors appeared wary: LendingClub shares fell roughly 20% after the earnings release. Concerns focused on near-term growth, which came in a bit soft, and the company's move to fair-value accounting. That accounting change can make earnings more volatile and harder to predict as assets are marked to market. The negative reaction underscores market sentiment toward consumer-credit lenders. LendingClub remains far below its IPO levels and even the rebound above $45 per share in 2021. Neither net income nor revenue has returned to the peaks seen in 2022. Valuation Looks Disconnected From Growth ProfileAnalysts are more mixed than alarmed. Of the 10 analysts setting 12-month price targets, six rate the company a Buy and four rate it a Hold. Zacks Research recently downgraded the stock to a Hold from Strong Buy, while JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM) raised its targets. Overall, the stock is listed as a Moderate Buy, with the average target set at $22 per share—more than a 50% upside from current levels. Although down about 25% year-to-date, shares are roughly 33% higher than a year ago. At a current price around $14, LendingClub trades at roughly 8–9 times 2026 earnings guidance and only slightly above its tangible book value. Those valuations are more typical of a struggling regional bank than of a growing digital lender. Credit Risk and Competition Remain Key OverhangsFor investors, LendingClub is an attractive story—but one whose outcome remains uncertain. The company has historically targeted prime and near-prime borrowers, so a rise in unemployment or a recession could quickly compress margins and income. Competition from large banks and other digital lenders is another ongoing risk. For growth-oriented investors comfortable with credit-cycle risk, the setup is compelling: LendingClub is delivering double-digit returns on equity, growing revenue, and increasing earnings. Still, the ifs remain. If the economy holds and the company’s interest margins, charge-off rates, and originations come in strong, LendingClub could be one of the more overlooked opportunities in the financial sector this year. |
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