1 Dividend Stock Down 43% to Buy Immediately for Years to Come

Down 43% from all-time highs, Propel is an undervalued dividend stock that offers you a yield of 4.4% in June 2026.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Propel Holdings posted record revenue of US$166 million in Q1 2026, up 20% year over year, with record originations of US$199 million.
  • The company has raised its quarterly dividend for 11 consecutive quarters and just approved another 7% increase.
  • Despite record results, the stock is down roughly 43% from its highs, creating what we believe is a rare buying opportunity.

A stock in free fall could either be a falling knife or an undervalued gem. Valued at a market cap of $944 million, Propel Holdings (TSX:PRL) is a TSX dividend stock down 43% from its all-time high.

The Canada-based entity is part of the cyclical lending sector and has underperformed the broader markets amid a challenging macro environment, including geopolitical tensions, rising inflation, sluggish consumer spending, and a global tariff war.

However, I think the time is ripe to add this beaten-down, undervalued stock to your watchlist in June 2026.

data analyze research

Image source: Getty Images

The bull case for the TSX dividend stock

Propel is a Canadian-headquartered but largely U.S. and U.K.-focused financial technology company. It provides personal loans and lines of credit to the roughly 90 million consumers in North America and the United Kingdom who are underserved by traditional banks.

TransUnion data released in early 2026 confirmed what Propel has been saying for years: consumers are being pushed out of prime lending segments and into non-prime territory.

Chief Executive Officer Clive Kinross called it “a structural shift that is expanding the population of underserved consumers across our markets” on the company’s first-quarter (Q1) earnings call.

That tailwind is showing up directly in Propel’s numbers.

In Q1, total originations funded hit a record US$199.3 million, up 30% year over year. New customer originations grew nearly 40%, while revenue surged 20% to a record US$166.1 million. The credit book, or combined loan and advance balance (CLAB), grew 23% to US$592.7 million.

And critically, credit quality improved.

  • Provision for loan losses fell to 45% of revenue in Q1, a significant drop from 56% in Q4 of 2025.
  • Net charge-offs came in at 12.6% of average CLAB, well within management’s target range.

Propel has raised its quarterly dividend for 11 straight quarters since Q4 of 2023. The board just approved another increase, bringing the annualized payout to $0.96 per share, representing a 7% jump and a yield of over 4%.

With the dividend stock down significantly from its highs, the yield on this growing payout is now considerably more attractive than it was a year ago.

At the same time, the company is targeting roughly 50% growth in bottom-line earnings for 2026 compared to 2025. Based on Q1 performance, management said the company is tracking slightly ahead of that target.

Propel is a high-growth fintech stock

Propel launched FreshLine in partnership with Column Bank in March 2026 to serve a new, near-prime segment of the credit spectrum.

It is already expanding state by state and ahead of management’s internal volume targets. The lending-as-a-service (LaaS) program grew revenues by 114% year over year in Q1, and management expects it to approach 10% of total company revenue by Q4 of 2026.

Propel Bank, now operating out of Puerto Rico, is building out a long-term platform to expand across all 50 U.S. states.

In the United Kingdom, Propel’s QuidMarket brand is growing at more than double the pace it was running a year ago, yet management says credit performance there remains exceptionally strong.

Further acceleration in growth in the U.K. is expected as the year progresses.

Propel has spent years building proprietary data and AI-powered underwriting. That investment is now yielding real efficiency gains: higher auto-decisioning rates, better loan-per-agent productivity, and the rollout of AI voice agents to handle routine customer interactions at scale.

The Foolish takeaway

Analysts tracking Propel stock forecast revenue to increase from US$590 million in 2025 to US$926.5 million in 2027. In this period, adjusted earnings per share are projected to expand from US$1.58 to US$2.80.

If the TSX dividend stock is priced at 12 times forward earnings, which is cheap, it could double within the next 12 months.

Fool contributor Aditya Raghunath has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Propel. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

man crosses arms and hands to make stop sign
Dividend Stocks

Are You Using Your TFSA the Right Way? Many Canadians Aren’t

You pay no taxes on Fortis (TSX:FTS) stock in a TFSA.

Read more »

dividend stocks are a good way to earn passive income
Dividend Stocks

How to Build a Paycheque Portfolio With 2 Stocks That Pay Monthly

These high-yield dividend stocks have relibale monthly payouts and are likely to sustain thier distributions in the years ahead.

Read more »

Piggy bank and Canadian coins
Dividend Stocks

Here’s the Average Canadian TFSA and RRSP at Age 35

Owning the right long-term investments can be excellent for your retirement goals, and here’s what you need to do to…

Read more »

woman checks off all the boxes
Dividend Stocks

1 Magnificent Canadian Dividend Stock Down 39% to Buy and Hold for Decades

Constellation Software pays a tiny dividend, but its 39% drawdown hands long-term investors a rare shot at market-beating gains.

Read more »

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian ETFs Soaring Upwards to Buy Now for a TFSA

The top-performing Canadian ETFs can provide reliable, tax-free passive income to TSFA investors like the established dividend payers.

Read more »

ETF is short for exchange traded fund, a popular investment choice for Canadians
Dividend Stocks

A Canadian ETF I’d Seriously Consider Adding to My Portfolio in 2026

This low-risk monthly income ETF beats most bank savings accounts.

Read more »

man looks surprised at investment growth
Dividend Stocks

TFSA VS. RRSP: The Simple Rule Canadians Forget

Canadians using the RRSP and TFSA can develop a tax-efficient financial engine by leveraging the tax-treatments of both accounts.

Read more »

Piggy bank and Canadian coins
Dividend Stocks

How the Average TFSA Changes Across Canada

TFSA averages vary by province, but the real edge comes from giving your TFSA a job — and Cascades could…

Read more »