Jubran N. Tanious, president and chief operating officer of Savers Value Village (NASDAQ: SVV), completed an insider sale and a concurrent option exercise on March 11, 2026. Tanious disposed of 45,000 shares of common stock at prices between $8.140 and $8.395 per share, generating proceeds totaling $373,644. After the sale, his direct holding in the company stands at 154,712.3281 shares.
On the same date, Tanious exercised options to acquire 100,000 shares of Savers Value Village common stock at an exercise price of $1.41 per share, for an aggregate cost of $141,000. Those options were granted under the company’s 2019 Management Incentive Plan and were fully vested on March 28, 2024.
Securities of Savers Value Village were trading at $7.88 at the time of reporting, a level that represents an 11% decline over the past week and a 37% drop over the trailing six months. External analysis from InvestingPro is cited as indicating the stock appears undervalued at current prices, with the relative strength index (RSI) suggesting the security may be in oversold territory. The InvestingPro platform also provides 10 additional ProTips for investors seeking further analysis of SVV.
In company performance updates, Savers Value Village released preliminary fourth-quarter metrics showing an 8.8% increase in U.S. comparable sales and a 0.7% rise in comparable sales in Canada. Those preliminary results contributed to UBS reiterating its Buy rating for Savers Value Village and maintaining a $16.00 price target. UBS conveyed that it does not expect significant surprises from the company’s forthcoming final fourth-quarter report. The firm’s stance reflects confidence tied to the company’s store growth outlook and the reported comparable-sales trends.
Investors and market participants will be watching for the final fourth-quarter results to confirm the preliminary figures and to provide additional clarity on the company’s near-term operating outlook.
Separately, tools marketed to investors are referenced as a means to assess valuation. One such tool, described as a Fair Value calculator, is said to combine multiple valuation models to evaluate whether SVV represents a bargain at current levels.