SoFi's customer additions will keep driving meaningful revenue growth.
Management is doing a wonderful job running the business with a disciplined approach.
The current valuation isn’t a bargain, but SoFi has earned a high multiple.
SoFi Technologies (NASDAQ: SOFI) can no longer be ignored by the investment community. The innovative digital banking platform sports a sizable market cap of $32 billion. This has come thanks to the company's share price surging 371% in the past 36 months (as of Jan. 20).
The volatile fintech stock is taking a breather, though. It's down 21% from its peak. Where will SoFi be in five years?
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Despite the financial services industry being extremely competitive, with little to no differentiation between companies' various offerings, SoFi has experienced fantastic success. Its growth metrics provide evidence of this.
SoFi had 12.6 million customers as of Sept. 30, 2025. That figure was nearly four times greater than the total at the end of 2021. The business is popular among younger and more affluent people, and it's winning over consumers with its easy-to-use interface that makes managing finances seamless.
Management forecasted adjusted net revenue to be $3.5 billion in 2025. This would represent 36% year-over-year growth. There are likely many years of double-digit top line gains in SoFi's future.
When businesses are growing this quickly, profits are typically an afterthought. That's because these leadership teams are focused more on expansion than financial efficiency. Resources are directed to marketing and product development efforts, with the hope that positive earnings will show up far into the future.
Here's where SoFi really stands out. The business was projected to generate $455 million in adjusted net income in 2025, an estimate that's double what was reported the year before. SoFi is able to run a leaner organization, since it doesn't operate physical bank branches. Soaring profits are also a clear sign that management is running the company with proper credit risk standards.
"I would like to invest a lot more than we're investing, but we're trying to balance both growth and being responsible for delivering profitability and good returns," CEO Anthony Noto said on the third-quarter 2025 earnings call. This demonstrates operating discipline.
SoFi shouldn't be valued like other banks. This is a tech-forward enterprise that's rapidly gaining ground in the financial services industry. Based on recent trends, its customer base, revenue, and profits are likely to be much higher five years from now. These favorable characteristics warrant a more expensive valuation.
As of this writing, SoFi stock trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 44.3. This is not a cheap entry point. However, it's easy to be confident that SoFi's impressive trajectory more than makes up for the starting valuation. I think the shares should perform well over the next five years.
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Neil Patel has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.