Nu Holdings (NYSE: NU) shares came under pressure midweek as investors digested both a leadership transition and renewed concerns over profitability metrics. The stock closed the session down roughly 2.4% at $11.64, before extending losses in after-hours trading. The decline followed heightened scrutiny after the company confirmed a CFO change that has added uncertainty to an already sensitive market narrative.
The company announced that Rob Livingston, formerly of Visa, will assume the role of chief financial officer on July 13. He will replace Guilherme Lago, who played a central role in Nubank’s IPO and investor relations strategy. While the transition is being framed as orderly, investors appear cautious about the timing given ongoing margin pressure and credit stress in core markets.
Sentiment around Nu weakened further after a wave of analyst revisions this week. Susquehanna reduced its rating to Neutral, cutting its price target sharply on concerns about declining operating margins and slowing profitability momentum. The bank highlighted a significant contraction in margins during the first quarter, signaling tighter earnings efficiency despite revenue growth.
Nu Holdings Ltd., NU
Separately, Bank of America downgraded the stock to Underperform, citing both leadership turnover and rising uncertainty in the credit environment. Analysts pointed to the CFO change as an added risk factor at a time when investors are already reassessing the company’s long-term valuation multiples.
These combined revisions reinforced a more cautious stance across Wall Street, especially as Nu continues expanding across Latin America while navigating more complex credit conditions.
Underlying financial trends added to investor concerns. In its latest quarterly results, Nu reported a meaningful increase in credit loss provisions, which rose sharply from the previous quarter. At the same time, its risk-adjusted net interest margin declined, signaling pressure on core lending profitability.
While the company continues to scale rapidly, expanding its customer base to over 135 million users, credit quality trends have become a key focus. Higher allowances for potential losses suggest a more conservative outlook on borrower performance, particularly in Brazil’s evolving credit landscape.
These dynamics have created tension between growth and profitability. Even as Nubank expands its ecosystem and pushes deeper into new markets, investors are questioning whether future earnings growth can keep pace with rising risk costs.
Despite short-term headwinds, Nu continues to post strong top-line expansion. Revenue recently surpassed the $5 billion mark for the first time, while net income grew significantly year-over-year. The company also emphasized its strategic focus on artificial intelligence, international expansion, and deepening penetration in core Latin American markets.
CEO David Vélez reiterated that Nubank remains committed to long-term growth objectives, even amid executive transitions and market volatility. However, the balance between aggressive expansion and financial discipline is now under sharper scrutiny.
The broader environment has not helped sentiment. Brazilian banking peers also declined during the session, reflecting sector-wide caution. Meanwhile, U.S. markets ended lower, with risk appetite weakening amid macroeconomic and geopolitical concerns.
For now, the debate is no longer about expansion alone, but whether that expansion can remain profitable under tightening credit conditions.
The post Nu Holdings (NU) Stock; Falls 2% as CFO Transition and Credit Concerns Offset Growth Outlook appeared first on CoinCentral.


