Live: Is Nu Holdings (NU) Ready to Jump After Earnings Tonight?
Quick Read
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Nu Holdings (NU) reported Q3 revenue of $4.17B. This beat consensus by $254M with net income up 41% year-over-year.
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Nu’s efficiency ratio improved to 27.7% from 31.4% as the business scaled without proportional cost increases.
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Nu’s credit portfolio grew 42% year-over-year while 90-plus day NPLs remained at 6.8% with 213% coverage.
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Earnings Scorecard: Nu Holdings Q4 2025
Overall Grade: A- Nu delivered a clean beat across every major financial dimension, with the lone asterisk being rising leverage and geographic concentration.
| Category | Grade | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue Performance | A | Full-year revenue reached $15.77B, up 37% YoY, with Q4 hitting $4.86B against an estimated $4.55B. |
| Earnings Beat/Miss | A | Net income grew 45% YoY to $2.87B, with Q4 net income of $894.8M clearing the $0.18 EPS consensus. |
| Guidance Quality | C+ | No formal guidance provided; investors must extrapolate from milestones like OCC approval and Mexico bank conversion. |
| Margin Trends | A | Efficiency ratio improved to 19.9% in Q4 from 24.7% in FY2024, signaling strong operating leverage. |
| Cash Flow | A- | Operating cash flow rose 45.9% YoY to $3.50B, though borrowings nearly tripled to $4.4B. |
| Management Confidence | B+ | Regulatory wins in the U.S. and Mexico signal strategic ambition, but absent formal guidance limits conviction. |
Nu’s Q4 reinforces its position as Latin America’s dominant digital bank. Revenue, earnings, and efficiency all improved simultaneously. Key caution flags: borrowings nearly tripled and 89% of revenue remains Brazil-dependent. Analysts carry a consensus price target of $19.99 against $16.67, implying upside if U.S. and Mexico expansion catalysts materialize.
Key Operating Highlights
| Metric | Q4’25 | QoQ | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|
| Customers | 131M | +4M | +15% |
| ARPAC | $15 | +9% | +27% |
| Activity Rate | 83% | Stable | +40bps |
| Efficiency Ratio | 19.9% | Improved | –180bps |
| 15–90 NPL | 4.1% | ↓20bps | Improved |
Key takeaways:
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ARPAC hit $15, up 45% YoY
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Efficiency ratio improved to 19.9%, down from 24.7% in FY24
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NPLs improved sequentially — critical for investor confidence
That combination — monetization up, costs down, credit stable — is exactly what you want to see in a scaling fintech.
NU Holdings Up 4%
Nu beat on growth, profitability, and credit stability — the three pillars investors care about most right now.
| Metric | Reported | Est. | Beat / Miss |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $4.86B | $4.55B | ✅ Beat |
| EPS (Normalized implied via NI) | Net Income $894.8M | $0.18 est | ✅ Beat |
Revenue reached $4.9B in Q4, up 45% YoY FX-neutral
Net income hit $894.8M, up 50% YoY
The 4% stock move reflects what the market sees: strong growth without credit deterioration.
A few minutes until earnings
The market closes in just a couple of minutes. Again a reminder on a few things we are watching for when the numbers come out.
With Nu Holdings reporting Q4 2025 results after tonight’s close, here is what investors need to know heading in.
What to Watch
Formal consensus EPS and revenue estimates for Q4 are not yet published, making the bar less defined than usual. Q3 provides the baseline: $0.17 EPS and $4.17B in revenue.
- Customer additions beyond 127 million
- Mexico penetration progress
- 90+ day NPL ratio (last at 6.8%)
- Efficiency ratio (last at 27.7%)
- Credit portfolio quality, as the final Credit Limit Increase Program rollout lands in Q4
Price Setup
Nu enters tonight down 8.8% over the past month at $16.59, with 16 analyst buy ratings versus 2 holds and a consensus price target of $19.99. At a P/E near 32x, any guidance disappointment could pressure shares.
Nu Holdings (NYSE: NU | NU Price Prediction) reports Q4 2025 results today after the market close. After delivering another strong growth quarter in Q3, the digital banking leader now faces a higher bar as investors assess whether rapid expansion can continue without pressure on asset quality.
A Record Quarter Sets a High Bar
Nu’s Q3 2025 results were difficult to criticize. Revenue reached $4.17 billion, exceeding consensus expectations of roughly $4.04 billion by about $134 million. Revenue grew 46% year-over-year, underscoring continued momentum across its core markets.
Net income totaled $783 million, up 39% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Customer growth remained a defining strength, with total customers reaching 127 million and an activity rate above 83%.
Operational leverage also improved. The efficiency ratio declined to 27.7%, reflecting Nu’s ability to scale revenue faster than operating costs — a key differentiator for a digital banking model expanding across multiple geographies.
Despite the strong operating performance, shares have traded unevenly in recent months. Over the past year, the stock has generated solid positive returns, though near-term performance has reflected broader emerging-market volatility rather than a deterioration in fundamentals.
One macro tailwind worth noting: the Brazilian real has strengthened in recent months against the U.S. dollar, which tends to benefit Nu’s reported USD financials given Brazil’s contribution to overall revenue.
Consensus Estimates for Q4 2025
| Metric | Q4 2025 Estimate | Full Year 2025 Estimate |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $4.55B | $15.65B |
| Normalized EPS | $0.18 | $0.59 |
| YoY Revenue Growth | 40% | 35% |
Consensus implies that analysts expect growth to remain strong into year-end, though slightly moderating from Q3’s 46% pace. Earnings expectations suggest continued profitability with stable operating leverage.
Credit Quality and Mexico Will Set the Tone
The two most important variables in tonight’s report are credit performance and international execution.
On credit, 90-plus day non-performing loans stood at 6.8% last quarter. While the company maintained solid coverage ratios, any deterioration will be scrutinized closely given the pace of lending growth. Nu’s credit portfolio expanded 42% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis, while secured lending grew 133%. Growth at that scale requires consistent underwriting discipline to sustain investor confidence.
Mexico remains the second major swing factor. Management has emphasized that Mexico’s unit economics are increasingly compelling as customer engagement deepens. Progress toward profitability in that market would reinforce Nu’s multi-country growth thesis and demonstrate that its Brazil playbook can be replicated.
Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.
He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.
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