Jana Partners disclosed a Schedule 13D on Alkami Technology on June 29, marking the activist's formal entry into the $1.4 billion digital banking software provider. The filing follows months of private engagement and positions Jana to push the board toward a strategic review process that several sell-side analysts now expect will conclude in a sale by year-end. Alkami shares trade at $27.80, a 34% discount to the twelve-month average analyst price target, despite consensus forecasts of 40.8% annual EPS growth through 2030.
Alkami provides cloud-native digital banking platforms to 228 U.S. credit unions and regional banks, with $284 million in trailing revenue and a gross margin near 62%. The company serves institutions with assets between $500 million and $50 billion, a tier now consolidating rapidly as larger banks acquire technology to retain deposit share. Jana's thesis centers on three arguments: the strategic value of Alkami's recurring revenue base exceeds public market valuation, buyer interest from core banking vendors has been underexplored, and management has not tested the M&A market aggressively enough. The activist controls roughly 7.2% of shares outstanding, purchased between $24.10 and $28.50 over the past ninety days.
The timing reflects two confluent pressures. First, regional bank M&A activity accelerated 22% year-over-year in Q1 2025, driven by deposit cost pressures and technology modernization imperatives. Alkami's platform reduces customer acquisition costs by an average of $180 per new account, a metric that becomes material at scale for acquirers. Second, private equity interest in vertical SaaS has shifted toward companies with embedded fintech exposure and predictable revenue. Jana believes Alkami's 89% net revenue retention rate and $1.1 million average contract value position the company for a takeout bid in the $38 to $42 per share range, implying a 9.5x to 11x forward revenue multiple. That compares to 7.1x today. Comparable transactions in the banking software space—Q2 Holdings at 10.2x, nCino at 8.9x—support the valuation gap argument.
Allocators should watch three near-term catalysts. First, Alkami's board will likely announce the formation of a special committee within 45 days, standard procedure following activist 13D filings of this size. Second, core banking incumbents Jack Henry and Fiserv have both expanded M&A pipelines in digital channels; either represents a logical strategic buyer with cost synergy potential exceeding $40 million annually. Third, private equity firms with existing fintech portfolios—Thoma Bravo, Vista Equity—have approached similar assets in recent quarters. Any bid north of $35 per share would trigger a competitive process.
Jana filed similar 13Ds on three other mid-cap software companies in the past eighteen months. Two resulted in sales within nine months. The third remains independent but repurchased $220 million in stock and replaced its CFO. Alkami's board has sixty days to respond formally, but the sale process has already begun in substance.