Good morning.
Tape rolled into Friday with NVDA DOWN 8 OF 10, LITE/AAOI parabolic-rolling, software +20% in May (Goldman: best month since 2002), and GS flagging hedge fund IT exposure as "running out of buyers" — positioning flashing distribution while fundamentals keep getting revised up, that's the wedge. Futures soft pre-mkt; Brent +1.8% on US-Iran tensions (direct read-through to European DC power costs). Asia caught a bid — SK Hynix and Samsung up pre-open after Goldman's 2027-28 OP hikes of 20-25%.
Four threads framing the day:
(1) HBM elongation is bleeding into adjacent pools. Goldman raised SK Hynix 2027 OP +21% to KRW 401TN ($266B), Samsung +21% to KRW 530TN ($352B); 2028 +24%/+23%, with DRAM/SSD contracts +200-300% since mid-2025, MLCC distributor hoarding, and ABF substrates +20% YTD — MU is the cleanest expression, commodity DRAM spillover is a separate bucket with different winners.
(2) European AI infra axis just opened — power is the binding constraint. SoftBank €75B / 5GW France DCs by 2031 with Schneider as industrial partner, largest European AI infra commitment on record; the catch is Europe power costs spiking on US-Iran and grid queues 3-7yr even on the flagship, so behind-the-meter (VST, GEV, BE) is the structural lever and SMCI/CRWV don't solve energy.
(3) Foundry customer concentration got its first public marker. Lip-Bu Tan: Panther Lake 7x volume this quarter at 50% yield on Intel 18A, external supply restricted to AAPL/GOOGL/NVDA/AWS as strategic products — INTC's foundry customer list reads like a who's who of AI hardware, with TSM/ASML/SNPS all flowing through.
(4) App-layer value accrual got its first clean print. Vista's insurance workflow: $8M manual → $3-4M general LLM → $200K proprietary context, a 40x improvement validating "context is the moat" — CRM/ADBE/NOW/WDAY live or die on replication, RDDT the other side of that trade, AI disintermediation of the ad-internet model is the genuine strategic question.
We'll hit up MU, INTC, and NVDA first, then get to networking and software.
VERDICT: STREET CAME OUT BULLISH, BUT THE 11% WEEKLY SLIP TELLS YOU POSITIONING WASN'T GREAT INTO THE DAY. Investor Day delivered everything bulls wanted on paper — Rule of 50 (up from Rule of 40), 30%+ long-term op margin (up from 20%), GAAP profitability by 2028, $5B+ ARR before 2028. Nine firms raised PTs. The stock sold off anyway. That gap between message and tape is the story.
Consensus cluster sits in the $250-$265 zone (Mizuho, RBC, Stifel, Truist, UBS, Barclays all converged there), with high-conviction longs at KeyBanc $300 and Morgan Stanley $305 (street high). Bears are an island: Guggenheim $140 (Sell) and Bernstein $136 (Market Perform). That's a $165 spread between high and low — massive. Most of the Street landed somewhere between "tape is fairly valued at 25x CY27 EV/Sales" (UBS, Neutral) and "top LT pick, core AI beneficiary" (RBC, Outperform). Consensus PT averages ~$240, implying modest upside from $236 — a coin flip on execution, not a free option.
"Come away feeling good about the company's ability to execute on its updated targets as NET remains a top LT pick and core AI beneficiary within our coverage." — Matt Hedberg, RBC (PT $260, Outperform)
The architecture is the bull case. Isolates (vs. VMs) give 50%+ lower TCO for agentic workloads, and management positioned that as the structural moat as agentic AI scales. Underlying growth validates it: Cloudflare One ARR +43% YoY, Developer Platform ARR +137% YoY. The margin expansion roadmap is the bull case for the multiple — trading at 25-29x EV/Sales is defensible if you're walking to 30%+ op margins and 30-35% FCF margin. Morgan Stanley and KeyBanc at $300+ are essentially saying: this is the picks-and-shovels play for agentic, and the margin glide path is conservative.
"Code suggestion tools natively select against Cloudflare for the core deployment environment when asked to design architecture themselves." — Bernstein (PT $136, Market Perform)
Two-pronged. Bernstein's angle is competitive — hosted Vercel's founder, sees Vercel/Next.JS as a real threat to developer mindshare. The edge-network/proxy model creates lock-in that buyers don't want. If AI coding assistants are the future of how infra gets chosen, NET gets bypassed. Guggenheim's angle is pure valuation — 29x EV/NTM recurring rev (highest in software coverage), P/B of 54.67. Prince's "Internet is the cloud" vision is consistent but unproven. Anderson's exit is a fresh GTM risk on top of a name already priced for perfection.
Bigger question for the group: does the "agentic internet" thesis validate the edge/isolates architecture (NET's bet) or does it push workloads back to hyperscalers (AMZN, MSFT, GOOGL) who can bundle everything? Bernstein's developer-tooling competition point is the version where NET loses share. Morgan Stanley's $305 is the version where NET is the third cloud. Those aren't small differences in framing.
Beat, but guide kills the party. Stock's a coiled spring heading into analyst day next week — the setup is "show me" and the tape just did the reset for you.
Q1 FY27 was a clean print top to bottom: ARR $1.163B (+26% YoY, beat $1.155B Street by ~$8M), revenue $280M (+22%), adj op margin 13.5% (beat guide by ~240bps, +330bps YoY), FCF $33M. SaaS ARR +36%, migration ARR more than doubled, emerging products ARR more than doubled and is now 20% of NNR. Mgmt raised FY27 ARR guide by $8M to 21.7% growth at the midpoint and Q2 guide was in-line to ahead.
But here's the rub — NNR ARR was $38M, DOWN 21% YoY and DOWN 55% QoQ. That's the number that got the stock sold. SAIL fell ~11% on the print (vs SPX -0.3%) and is now -15% on the week, down from $17.69 to $15.20-15.66. Was up 50% in the month before the print — so this is the "you had to be perfect" reaction off a vertical move. Mgmt is not raising implied NNR ARR for the next several quarters, just passing through the beat. BMO called that out explicitly as disappointing vs best-of-breed security peers who did raise.
PT cluster converged to $19 from prior $17, with Cantor the high outlier at $23 (Overweight, reiterated) and Mizuho the low at $16 (Neutral). Wolfe to $18 from $15, Truist at $18 Buy. Eight brokers touched it, seven Buy/Outperform, one Neutral, no sells. Bull/bear PT spread is $16-23 (~44% range) — that's wide for a name with this much coverage, which tells you the debate is real.
Consensus sits mid-to-high teens and the tape just pulled the stock to a discount to the cluster, so the math is doing what it does. Mkt cap ~$8.9B on $1.16B ARR = roughly 7.6x ARR. Not screaming cheap, not expensive for 26% grower with margin expansion.
Bulls lean on: (1) the ARR beat accelerated vs Q4 — first time the beat trend hasn't been compressing since IPO (Wells Fargo's point). (2) Mgmt called out no sales cycle extension and no seat-based headwinds, which Scotiabank/Colville flagged as the single most important data point — that's the macro fear trade removed. (3) AI/agentic security pipeline DOUBLED QoQ with new agentic SKUs and non-human identity exposure, which is not in the guide at all — pure upside lever. (4) On-prem to SaaS conversion: 10% of base expected to convert in FY27 at a 2-3x ARR uplift. (5) Truist's "durability of business model and continued secular demand" line captures it — the secular identity governance tailwind is intact.
"Upbeat throughout the year is likely as management commentary around an agentic inflection remains bullish, and we think guidance remains conservative as the company looks to be thoughtful around not predicting timing of AI impacting results." — RBC Capital
Bears lean on: (1) NNR ARR -21% YoY and -55% QoQ is a real deceleration, not noise. (2) Mgmt explicitly not raising NNR ARR for the next few quarters — that tells you what the bookings signal is showing internally. BMO: "we view as disappointing, particularly given raises by best-of-breed security peers." (3) Competition in agentic AI identity is real and growing — Scotiabank called out Token, Oasis, Astrix (Cisco just bought them), and Entro. (4) Cross-sell success is uncertain (Mizuho). (5) The guide was just a mechanical pass-through of the beat — if mgmt had conviction on acceleration, they would have raised more. Cantor noted "guidance that only passed through the beat and an agentic story that remains nascent."
Nothing here was a surprise structurally — the identity governance story, the SaaS transition, the agentic optionality were all known. The incremental is: (1) NNR deceleration into Q1 (this is the data point PMs will care about most), (2) AI pipeline doubling without contribution in guide (call it 2H catalyst at earliest), (3) analyst day next week — every single broker that covered referenced it as the next inflection point for the narrative, particularly on AI roadmap and growth durability.
SAIL is the cleanest read on two themes: non-human identity as the next attack surface (every agentic AI deployment needs governance) and post-IPO security names getting repriced when guide is anything less than a raise. If you own PANW/CRWD/OKTA long, you should care about SAIL because the agentic identity narrative is upstream of zero-trust and downstream of every AI security product. If SAIL can't accelerate NNR, the "AI = new security spend" thesis takes a small dent. Conversely, if SAIL's analyst day next week puts numbers around agentic, the whole non-human identity sub-theme (smaller private names) gets validated. Watch the print reaction more than the print itself — the tape just told you what the marginal buyer was looking for and didn't get.
Bottom line: Solid execution, weak guide, wide PM debate. The stock's -15% on the week creates the entry, analyst day next week creates the catalyst, and NNR ARR into Q2 is the metric that will resolve the bull/bear. Not fading it here, but not chasing either — want to see mgmt commit to a higher NNR print path before paying up for the agentic option.
Verdict: Street shrugs. Bulls and bears both walked away from WWDC thinking they were right — and that's the problem. AAPL $294.81, market cap $4.35T, sitting on the line between a 36.9x trailing P/E and 28x FY27 multiple. Three PT raises to $350 (Maxim, Bernstein, TD Cowen), one reiteration (UBS $296 neutral), and the whole street bracketed $276-$350. That ~$75 spread tells you the WWDC tape didn't narrow the debate — it widened it.
Three brokers landed at $350 — Maxim (up from $310), Bernstein (reiterated Outperform), TD Cowen (up from $335). Bulls on average modeling ~33-35x FY27/CY27 EPS, arguing current 28x is a discount to the big-tech peer average of 34.5x. That's the multiple-expansion thesis in a nutshell.
Neutrals cluster $276-$300 — UBS ($296), Rosenblatt ($276), with Jefferies ($299.88, Hold) and Oppenheimer (Perform, no PT) echoing the "evolutionary not revolutionary" chorus. Current price is in this cluster, which means the market is pricing neutral-skeptic right now. For the stock to rerate to $350, the bears need to capitulate — and nothing from this WWDC forces that.
BULL STEELMAN: The Google-Gemini partnership on the 3rd-gen Apple Foundation Models is the buried lede. Bernstein flagged it first. Apple finally has a credible frontier-model path without spending OpenAI-scale capex. The Siri AI rebrand with a dedicated cross-platform app — persistent conversation layer, iCloud sync — is the first real UX redesign Siri has gotten in a decade. And the iCloud+ gating on heavy server features is the first credible AI monetization vector. That's the bull case in three moves: model credibility, product surface, monetization infrastructure. Multiple should expand to 33-35x once revenue inflects.
BEAR STEELMAN: UBS called it straight: Siri AI is "not a demand game changer." TD Cowen — a bull — admitted the event came in slightly below expectations because they expected full LLM/third-party app integration and didn't get it. That's a bull admitting the tape underwhelmed. EU exclusion is a real headwind (450M+ users locked out at launch). Rosenblatt's read: Apple's AI "aligns with existing market standards" — i.e., catch-up play, not category creation. And the stock at 36.9x P/E isn't pricing in "iterative for the next couple years."
"The features are additive to user experience and offer convenience improvements over prior versions." — UBS, calling Siri AI "not a demand game changer"
New: Google/Gemini co-development of Apple's foundation models (this is the structural shift — Apple pivoted away from pure in-house to a hybrid partnership). Siri AI as a dedicated cross-platform app with persistent memory. iCloud+ as AI monetization rail. Tim Cook's final WWDC as CEO — succession overhang just got real.
Already known: Hybrid on-device/Private Cloud Compute architecture was telegraphed at WWDC 2025. Apple has been behind on AI — positioning as "privacy-first" is the established frame, not a new angle.
This is the AI "show me" tape for mega-cap consumer hardware. If Apple can't move the needle on iPhone demand from a Siri overhaul, nobody can. Neutral camp is betting on the foldable (Fall 2026) as the next real catalyst — and using WWDC as confirmation that AI alone doesn't drive a hardware upgrade cycle. For GOOGL bulls, the Apple/Gemini partnership is a quiet win — Google just embedded its model stack into the highest-AUM consumer distribution channel on earth. For the broader AI infra trade (NVDA, MU, AVGO), the read is mixed: Apple building proprietary models + Google partnership means less reliance on OpenAI/Anthropic API spend. The monetization signal is small but it's there, and PMs should watch iCloud+ attach rates into the Fall print.
Positioning bias: Neutral. The $350 target requires a multiple-expansion narrative that this WWDC didn't fully deliver. The $276 bear case requires the EU exclusion to metastasize. Realistically, AAPL chops in a $280-$310 range until we get foldable unit data and the first iCloud+ conversion metrics.
VERDICT: DASH WAS GOOD, STREET RATCHETS UP, BUT $81B MCD CAP WITH STOCK OFF 9% IN A WEEK MEANS THE BUYING WINDOW ISN'T WIDE OPEN. Stifel/Piper/Canaccord all walking up PTs post-conference, but the easy money's been made on the +90% YTD-ish run. Wait for a cleaner entry.
Street consensus coming out of the user conference: product velocity is real, the agentic AI narrative is landing with enterprise buyers, and DDOG's position as the consolidated observability layer is hardening. Piper, Canaccord, and Stifel all leading with AI — but the more interesting data points are buried deeper.
Four firms lifted PTs into the $250-305 range post-conference. Canaccord $250 from $225 (16x CY27 sales), Piper $275 from $230, Stifel $305 reiterated (top of the cluster), DA Davidson $250 reiterated, RBC $250 from $219. Benchmark took theirs to $230 from $150 after Q1 beat. Cluster moved from prior $200-255ish to $250-305.
"Every Bits capability makes data in Datadog more valuable, and every frontier model release makes the problem Datadog solves bigger." — Kingsley Crane, Canaccord Genuity
That's the right framing. Land-and-expand on data gravity plus the surface area for observability keeps expanding as models proliferate. Hard to argue against the thesis directionally.
BULL: AI-native cohort at 22/$1M+ customers is just the early innings. Bits AI drives platform stickiness — every investigation makes the data layer more valuable. FedRAMP High opens federal TAM, which DDOG hasn't really tapped. Pricing flexibility (Stifel noted recent reductions on some solutions) addresses the gating factor. Non-AI re-acceleration means the core isn't a drag on the multiple.
BEAR: Stock trades above fair value per Pro, $81B market cap pricing in a lot of execution. Stifel explicitly flagged pricing as a gating factor to adoption — even the bull case has that caveat. Director Matthew Jacobson sold 38,594 shares at $243-$277 — insider dump at the highs. +90% trailing year means positioning is likely crowded, and the 9% pullback could be the start of a deeper mean reversion. Multiple already pricing in perfect AI monetization.
Strong fundamental narrative intact, but the R/R here is tighter than the street's PT hikes suggest. PT cluster $250-305 vs $227 print — that's 10-34% upside, but you're buying into a name that's already worked. The buyable dip is probably $200-210, not here. Scale-in levels, don't chase the conference pop.
Also worth flagging: FedRAMP HIGH CERTIFICATION on the Government platform is under-discussed. Federal observability TAM is real and DDOG had zero share. This is a TAM expansion catalyst that probably doesn't fully bake in for 2-3 quarters.
The tape loves it, the Street is mostly in, and valuation is the only thing anyone can argue with. ETR rallied into investor day and is now sitting at $110, up ~37% YOY, and the sell-side response is "we're staying positive but please don't make us chase this." Cluster of PTs now sits $121-135 with UBS the high at $135, Evercore upgrading to Outperform at $121, Scotiabank reiterating $129 Sector Outperform, Truist Buy at $127. The notable action: BMO, Mizuho, and BTIG all LOWERED targets ($123, $122, $126 respectively) on valuation even while keeping positive ratings. The Street basically moved its estimates to management's guide — so the upside here is multiple, not numbers.
Management laid out a $67B five-year capex plan (now includes 2030) — that's roughly DOUBLE 2024 levels and comes on top of a $14B hike announced just two months ago. Sales growth guide ~9% over five years, also double 2024. EPS CAGR: ~13% over 5 years, >8% sustained THROUGH 2035. Amazon and Meta both showed up and talked up signed energy service agreements representing $7B in customer savings. That's not window dressing — hyperscalers don't fly to New Orleans investor days to be polite.
Then Entergy went and priced 19.25M shares at $113, raising $2.175B at a 3.7% discount to fund the build. Dilution is real, but the alternative is balance sheet strain at $67B of capex.
Bull: This is the most direct regulated-utility data center play, period. Truist calls it one of three top names in P&U. Standardized buildout approach = execution risk moderated. Regulator-friendly jurisdictions. Amazon and Meta signed. $67B of capex equals earnings visibility through 2035. The data center demand isn't theoretical — it's contracted.
Bear: Scotiabank explicitly flags ETR at a ~17% premium to its coverage universe — THE HIGHEST in the group. You're paying up for a story that's already in the price. The equity raise at a discount is a tell. And three firms (BMO, Mizuho, BTIG) cut PTs on valuation post-day despite positive ratings. If data center load growth slows or hyperscalers pull back commitments, the multiple has no margin for error.
From Evercore's upgrade note: "The case for the higher rating rests on the risk profile of Entergy's plan rather than on the size of the plan or estimate revisions." That's a sophisticated call — they're not arguing the numbers are too low, they're arguing execution risk is now lower than the Street thinks. Standardized approach, partnerships, regulator-friendly jurisdictions = they sleep better owning this at $110.
Steady-as-she-goes name, fundamentals intact, but the easy money's been made — +37% YOY tells you that. Long-term compounder for patient capital, tough chase here on a 17% premium unless you think the data center trade is going another leg. Would want to be a buyer closer to $100 than $115.
Verdict: Show-me story with a credible pivot, but the Q1 print was UGLY. Stock's at ~$34, down 33% YTD and trading near 52-week lows. Street PTs cluster $55-60, so the buy-side framework here is "do you believe the cloud transition thesis and Blueprint traction offset the term license cliff?" That's the real question coming out of PegaWorld.
Q1 FY26: revenue $430M vs $456M consensus (DOWN 10% YoY vs expected 4% decline), non-GAAP EPS $0.46 vs $0.65 estimate. The headline numbers are hideous. Two-way miss, with the magnitude on the revenue line being the bigger tell — that's not a beat-and-raise setup, that's a deceleration story.
Bright spot buried in the wreckage: CLOUD +36% YoY TO $205M (48% OF TOTAL). That's real, that's above most estimates, and it matters because the model is predicated on the cloud transition masking the term license decay. But...
The term license line is the problem child. Came in at $95M vs Rosenblatt modeling ~$162M. That's a ~$67M hole — explains a big chunk of the revenue miss and it raises the question of whether license deprecation is steeper than the buy side expected. You can't paper over a number that bad with "cloud is growing."
~3,000 attendees this year vs ~3,750 last year (down ~20%). Not a confidence-inspiring data point. The narrative the bulls are leaning on: Blueprint is working, modernization is early innings, AI isn't crowding out transformation spend.
Here's the tension worth flagging: RBC came out of the conference saying "Blueprint is accelerating sales cycles and that it remains early innings for legacy modernizations." DA Davidson came out and said partners noted elongated sales cycles excluding Blueprint benefits. Read those together and you're basically getting the same answer from two angles — Blueprint is the engine, the rest of the bag is grinding. That's either a green shoot (Blueprint carries the model) or a warning (one product doing the heavy lifting while the underlying motion stalls).
"We believe Pegasystems' growth and profitability profile is undervalued... the platform's Fair Value analysis indicates the stock is undervalued at current levels near its 52-week low." — DA Davidson
Management also reiterated 2027 and 2028 long-term targets at the conference. No change to the framework, which is fine if you believe it and infuriating if you don't.
PTs post-PegaWorld cluster at $55-60, mostly reiterations with small trims. RBC took $65 → $60, Rosenblatt $62 → $58. Davidson and Citizens held firm at $55 and $58. Net-net: $55-60 PT BAND, 60-75% IMPLIED UPSIDE FROM $34. That's a wide bogey and it's the only reason this name is on anyone's watchlist right now.
Bull: Cloud +36% is the proof point, PEG at 0.22 is a tell, Blueprint traction confirmed, modernization TAM is real, stock's been obliterated so bad news is largely priced. If they hit the 2027/2028 targets the upside is multi-bagger from here.
Bear: Revenue DOWN 10% YoY, term license cliff is real and accelerating, attendees down 20%, partners are telling you cycles are elongated (ex-Blueprint), and the 2027/2028 targets feel like they're held together with hope and cloud growth assumptions. PEG is low because earnings are about to inflect lower.
This is a "the PTs are wide enough to matter" setup, not a "the print changed the story" setup. The Q1 didn't kill the cloud transition thesis — it just made the path more painful. Need to see term license decay stabilize AND cloud growth hold the 30%+ range before the multiple re-rates. Until then, it's a falling knife with a credible story attached. Position size accordingly, and don't let the low PEG fool you — low PEs on decelerating names can stay low for a long time.
Verdict: Investor day bought time, not a multiple. Cloud migration story is the spine — AI is the option premium. Sitting here, you want to fade the rip into $325 resistance, not chase.
TYL printed $308.92 yesterday, up 1.7% on the day while IGV got crushed -2.8%. Respect the relative strength. But the stock is still DOWN 32% IN SIX MONTHS and DOWN 47% OFF THE YEARLY HIGH. This isn't a broken chart turning — it's a fallen angel still in a downtrend with a credible (but not yet proven) re-rating story.
Investor day in Frisco was the setup. Management tightened the 2030 revenue range (raised the low end, kept the high end roughly intact) and lifted the long-term margin outlook. 2026 Non-GAAP EPS guide went to $12.80-$13.05, a modest 2.4% raise at the midpoint. Not a blowout guide-up. The thesis is durability, not acceleration. And for a name trading at 42x P/E with sub-20% top-line growth, durability better be the word of the day.
Phase 1 → Phase 2 of the cloud migration is the meat. Management called it "Cloud Living" — standardizing both Tyler's platform and its government customers onto a single cloud model over the next several years. That's the wedge: every legacy on-prem county or municipality Tyler has sold into for 30 years becomes a forced cloud upgrade cycle. Stifel's framing is clean — Tyler is a "partner to the public sector end-market, which is structurally risk-averse," and that risk-aversion is now a moat as much as it is a headwind. The buyers move slow but they move once, and they don't churn.
Cloud migration is the primary cycle here. Not AI. Cantor's call on this is worth underlining:
"Cloud migration remains the primary technology cycle for state, local and education markets, not artificial intelligence at this point."
We agree. The new chief AI officer seat (Franklin Williams) plus a chief transactions officer role are signal — Tyler's building the org chart for the next leg, not the current one. AI is 2027+ monetization, not 2026.
Four coverage shops on the tape. Cluster of $400-543 BUYS with one $340 NEUTRAL sitting at the bottom — that's the bear paint.
The $1.44B CONVERTIBLE AT 0.50% COUPON (due 2031, with $187.5M greenshoe) is the part of the story people are underweighting. Cheap, patient capital to fund cloud capex and tuck-ins. The 0.50% coupon tells you management isn't paying up for money — they're locking in the cost of capital at a 2021-era level. Smart. Bullish read on their confidence in forward FCF.
Riverside County Sheriff's Office contract (Enterprise Corrections across 5 jails, replacing a 30-year-old system) is the boring win that compounds. Multi-year, sticky, mission-critical. Nobody tweets about it, but it's the business model.
Long-term TYL is fine — you own quality gov-tech for a re-rating that comes when SaaS multiples stabilize. Short-term, $325 is the line. Get there on any IGV bounce or sympathetic AI-gov-tech rotation, fade it. $290 is the floor to defend. Below that, the story breaks.
We're not chasing the 1.7% relative-strength day. We're watching DA Davidson's model update and the next two quarters of cloud ARR disclosures. If 2026 EPS walks to the $13.05 HIGH END of guide and cloud bookings accelerate, the $400-460 PT cluster has room to compress higher. If it doesn't, Cantor wins at $340.
Positioning: SMALL LONG, NOT ADDING ON RIP.
Verdict: still a buy, but the easy money is behind us. Stock's down 30% off the $745 52-week high and ~23% YTD — the multiple has done the work for bears. Street remains Buy/Overweight with a PT cluster of $665-775, ~27% avg upside. The trade now is execution, not narrative.
Fundamentals remain elite: 66% LTM revenue growth, 88% gross margins, AEBITDA margins sustained ABOVE 80%, Piotroski 9, PEG 0.44. The kind of profile where you don't fight the tape, you wait for entries.
Bear — Meta is the headline overhang and nobody has answers. Piper's James Callahan called it the #1 investor concern with zero consensus on probability or financial impact. Then there's Axon self-serve going public this summer — BofA is openly flagging their own estimates could prove too high within months of launch, with quarterly prints now more susceptible to surprises as the advertiser base scales. (Translation: vol is coming, and it won't all be up.)
(That last clause is the part to watch. BofA telling you their own number might be wrong on the first data point is rare — usually banks defend the model until forced. Honest framing or quiet hedge? Probably both.)
Take: stay long but respect the tape. Five brokers raised or reiterated today, Street PT range is $40-$106, and the stock is STILL down 14% on the week after a 215% run. Something is bothering the market. Could be the $1.59B notes offering out of ComputeCo 3, could be profit-taking into a 2028 cash flow story, could be nothing. The fundamentals just got demonstrably better — $36B contracted, third deal with the same U.S. hyperscaler, 1.4 GW under contract — but APLD at $46 with a Lake Street $90 PT and a Street high of $106 is a name that's priced for execution, not surprise.
Monday's 15-year lease at Delta Forge 2 — 210 MW, $5.2B base term, up to $12.7B with renewals over 30 years — is the third contract with the same U.S. hyperscaler. That customer concentration is either a moat (validated site, repeat buyer) or a risk (single point of failure) depending on your lens. Lake Street, Craig-Hallum, Needham, Compass Point, and Citizens all responded positively. The $36B total contracted revenue is the headline number now — that's $2.4B/year run-rate, multiples of the $319M LTM revenue print.
Lake Street moved most aggressively: $90 PT from $70, calling APLD on track for the $2B NOI goal as additional leases sign. Needham went to $83 from $66. Craig-Hallum lifted to $79 from $75 and explicitly reduced the discount it had applied to part of its valuation model.
Bull: Three of five hyperscaler leases are with the same customer — that's customer love, not customer concentration risk. Craig-Hallum flagged the third-party tech stack (Corintis, Base Electron, Babcock & Wilcox) as enabling a plug-and-play delivery model, which means APLD can scale into new markets (Alabama hiring activity suggests the next one is coming) without reinventing the build. 1.4 GW still being marketed, and management's $2B NOI target now has multiple visible paths. The Street high of $106 implies more than 2x from here.
Bear: $46 stock, $90 PT, $106 high — that's a name pricing 2028 lease commencement PERFECTLY. Delta Forge 2 doesn't flip on until Q1-2028. Every dollar of that $36B is back-end loaded. The $1.59B senior secured notes offering out of ComputeCo 3 adds leverage into a build cycle that hasn't generated cash yet. Revenue is $319M; contracted is $36B. That's a 100x gap. The 14% weekly decline into a tape where every single broker is raising is the tell — someone is selling size, and the marginal buyer needs a better entry.
ComputeCo 3 pricing on the $1.59B notes. Spread tells you what the credit market thinks about the lease cash flows. If it prices tight, the bull case re-rates. If it widens, the 14% drop was prescient. Also: the next hyperscaler lease. Polaris Forge 3 (May) and Delta Forge 2 (now) — that's two in five weeks. A third in Q3 would make the $106 Street high look conservative. Until then, this trades on tape and funding, not fundamentals.
The verdict: DOWN 58% Y/Y, this is a coiled spring — but the spring only releases if you underwrite a 2027 reacceleration the print hasn't confirmed. Stock at $125.84, 24% LTM growth, 77% GM, and a street split right down the middle.
Cantor and Piper both walked Zenith Live in Vegas. Heard the same pitch: ZS positioning as a "control plane" for agentic workflows. New products — AI Broker and Endpoint AI Security. Expanded Project AI-Guardian with AWS, Google Cloud, and OpenAI. Zero Trust extending from users/branches/workloads to autonomous agents. Management's core argument: AI agents create new attack surface around identity, intent, permissions, and data lineage — and ZS owns the architecture to lock it down.
Piper: "The debate remains whether these innovations can translate into measurable growth acceleration."
That one sentence is the entire ZS debate in 14 words.
BULL (Cantor, Guggenheim, Freedom): Customer urgency around AI security is real and accelerating. ZS has the platform, the data, the channel. 58% off is pricing in a thesis that's already broken — Q3 showed 24% growth with 77% gross margins. Hyperscaler + OpenAI partnerships validate the ecosystem. New logo execution in underpenetrated enterprise is the next leg. $214-230 PTs = 70-83% UPSIDE to current.
BEAR (Piper, implicitly): The agentic narrative is a great conference keynote. The 2027 framework is what actually matters. Sales leadership turnover still being absorbed. FCF guide-down tells you the company is investing aggressively BEFORE it monetizes. Stock's cheap for a reason — this is a digestion year, not an inflection year. 24% growth is good but it's decelerating from the old ZS days.
GTA VI is the entire trade. Everything else is noise. Stock at $211, down 17% YTD — the market is NOT pricing a clean GTA 6 win here, which is either the setup of the year or a trap. You decide which.
The fundamental picture is actually decent. Q4 just printed: $0.80 EPS vs $0.57 Street, $1.58B revenue. LTM revenue $6.66B with 18% growth, and the buy-side is modeling FY27 at 26% growth to $6.60 EPS — a complete turnaround from the current -$1.62 LTM loss. If you're going to own one name with a binary catalyst 5 months out, this is the cleanest expression.
This is where it gets interesting. Piper's buyside survey (skewed hedge fund) landed on three key data points:
"Buy the stock after pre-orders are announced and sell one month before GTA 6 release, although some acknowledge that view feels 'too easy' and likely won't work."
Translation: everyone sees it, which means everyone sees it. Post-launch, the path is GTA Online engagement, PC timing, and how the stock prices into FY28 numbers. Mobile keeps bleeding but the deceleration has stabilized per Raymond James's May tracker — NBA 2K and GTA in-line with recent trends.
Summer marketing window opens soon (new trailer, game content per RJ) — that's the first incremental catalyst after today. Reiterated Nov release date is the floor; any slippage is a -10% event.
Bull: $39B mkt cap for a company that will print $6.60 of FY27 EPS with GTA 6 as the driver is a joke valuation. PC is a free option. GTA Online monetization compounds for years post-launch. Pre-order announcement = the entry. If ASP surprises to the upside on a $100 LE version, this rips through $250 before launch.
Bear: It's a $39B stock with a SINGLE game doing all the work. Mobile declines aren't recovering, they're just stabilizing at a lower level. AI/IP risk isn't zero even if buyside is more comfortable than 3 months ago. And that "buy pre-orders, sell pre-release" trade being consensus means the easy money is gone — you need to be right about GTA Online trajectory and PC, not just the launch. Valuation vs post-GTA 6 numbers gets tough fast.
Tactical: own it, watch for the pre-order window. The asymmetry is real if you trust the FY27 numbers. The risk is a Nov slippage or a GTA 5-replay launch (sell the news hard). Not the cleanest setup in TMT, but probably the highest-conviction binary in gaming.
WIX trades $48.36, basically at its 52-WEEK LOW ($46.90), after a brutal guidance cut, a 20% RIF (~1K employees), and a brutal narrative shift — from "AI-driven hypergrowth" to "resizing the business against a softer top-line." The Street split is WIDE.
Bookings growth cut to LOW-TEENS from mid-teens. Revenue guide: low-to-mid teens from mid-teens. Full-year headwind of ~$50M on bookings, ~$25M on revenue. The kicker: FCF guide UP by $20M to $420M. Run-rate cost saves $150M, $70M hitting this year. Roughly 1/3 of the slowdown is Partners segment weakness (real demand issue). The other 2/3 is MANAGEMENT CHOOSING profitable growth over pace. That's the part bulls and bears are fighting about.
The Street is all over the map. RBC is the bear — cut PT to $45 (from $60), Sector Perform, citing AI headwinds and partner weakness. Benchmark is the bull — reiterated BUY, $115 PT, basically saying the reset clears the air. Scotiabank (Nat Schindler) cut to $90 from $110, still Sector Outperform, but explicitly flagged the multiple compression: from ~13X to ~10X 2027 non-GAAP EPS. UBS cut to $58 from $68, Neutral. So you have a range of $45-$115 — that's 2.5X spread between top and bottom, which tells you nobody agrees on the right framework here.
"Wix's organizational realignment reinforces management's ability to protect FCF, but we view this as a trade-off rather than an outright positive." — Nat Schindler, Scotiabank
That quote basically IS the bull/bear debate in one sentence.
Bull case (Benchmark, Scotiabank): 25% FCF YIELD, the company is now self-funding the business while cutting into a faster-growing total addressable market via the OpenAI/Codex Enterprise integration. The trade-off is value-accretive if you believe management on the 2/3 "choice" framing. SOTP on $420M FCF gets you well north of here.
Bear case (RBC): AI is structurally compressing the web design TAM, Partners softness is a real demand signal (not a mix shift), and the FCF uplift is a one-time cost-cut story that won't compound. $45 is the bottom of the range for a reason — at that price you're saying "the model is broken."
Hard to underwrite the bull case when you're AT the 52-week low and management just said the word "trade-off" out loud. The FCF story is real — 25% yield is a signal — but the market is telling you the top-line deterioration is bigger than $50M. We're not sure we can read too much into the OpenAI partnership yet (no disclosed revenue impact), but that's the optionality the bulls need to actually be right here. PMs want to be sized for "the reset is over" but the tape doesn't say that yet.
Cantor just ripped LRCX to a $425 PT from $320 — biggest raise we've seen on the name — and held Overweight. Stock prints $327, up 262% over the past year, knocking on the 52w high of $349. After a move like that you'd expect some profit-taking, some PT trims, some "wait for a pull-in" calls. Not happening. Cantor says leading-edge foundry/logic and AI-driven advanced packaging are the primary WFE growth drivers, with the majority of new wafer starts in 2026/2027 going into AI-driven logic. The Street is still racing each other higher.
Cluster: Cantor $425, Mizuho $380, MS $331 (just upgraded to OW), UBS $310. 24 analysts have revised estimates upward recently — this is a herd, not a lone wolf.
Two things bug us, even as we can't argue with the directional call:
1. Valuation. 262% in a year. The easy money is made. New $425 PT is only ~30% upside from here — that's a year-long grind to match a year-long move. Not a great r/r at the front door. 2. China. New US DoC restrictions on shipments to Hua Hong. LRCX and the rest of the US WFE complex are all in the blast radius. Cantor doesn't address it; MS/Mizuho don't either. Worth tracking, not worth panic-selling on.
Bottom line: the thesis is real, the analysts are aligned, and the upgrade cycle still has legs. But you're not buying a hidden gem here — you're paying up for a known winner and hoping the AI wafer-start cycle runs longer than anyone models. Position accordingly.
"The firm expects the stock to eventually trade at multiples of 15 to 20 times seen in service-heavy businesses, but believes Vertiv's earnings power can still drive an attractive baseline price even if this occurs by 2030."
That's the right frame. Earnings power carries the stock even in a world where AI compute doesn't scale linearly. But it caps the multiple from here.
The sell-side is chasing. Cantor hiked PT to $2,000 from $1,600 — keep the Overweight — but the stock's already $2,139. So the new bogey sits below spot by ~6%. Cantor is essentially saying "still own it, we just don't have a number above where it's trading." That tells you more about the tape than the call. KLAC is +151% Y/Y, kissing its $2,262 52-week high, and the analyst community is now in price-discovery mode trying to keep up.
The underlying thesis, though, is the right one. Leading-edge foundry/logic is the structural WFE driver and KLAC owns the process control lane — high-margin, high-moat, mission-critical at every node transition. The kicker this quarter was advanced packaging: KLA raised that revenue bucket to ~$1B on AI accelerator demand. That line was buried in the Q3 call but it's huge — advanced packaging is the new bottleneck for AI compute, and process control there is still early innings.
"KLA raised its advanced packaging revenue outlook to approximately $1 billion based on AI accelerator demand."
DRAM is the other engine. HBM and DDR5 capacity adds for AI DCs are pulling EUV inspection intensity per wafer higher — every EUV layer is more KLA content. NAND is grinding — no new wafer starts at scale in 2026 per Cantor, so NAND is purely a layer-count upgrade story, not a unit story. That's enough to support revenue but not enough to be the bull case. Mature-node is stable, nothing exciting.
Tape read on the print: Q3 was a clean beat — $9.40 EPS vs $9.15, rev $3.42B vs $3.36B — and the stock fell in AH/premarket. That's positioning, not fundamentals. Anyone who wanted to own AI-exposed WFE already did. The bar got raised into the print and even a beat couldn't clear it. Setup into the next quarter is a little cleaner now — expectations have reset, and the advanced packaging $1B trajectory gives Cantor (and others) a reason to chase the PT higher from here.
Bottom line: name's working, stock's already priced for the bull case, and the next leg needs NAND to actually turn or advanced packaging to inflect above that $1B run-rate. We like the fundamentals. We don't love the entry. Trim into strength, don't chase the highs.
TD Cowen bumps PT to $475 from $450, stays Buy. Modest raise (~$25, or ~5.5%) but the bigger tell is why: they're getting well above consensus on both capex AND depreciation, modeling a 10x gigawatt capacity buildout by 2031 and a 10x capex ramp from 2023 levels. The investment case boils down to one question — when does the AI infrastructure spend actually print ROI? TD Cowen's answer is 2027 and beyond, with Cloud margins expanding steadily and return on capex approaching pre-AI levels by then. PEG of 0.6 is the valuation hook they're hanging their hat on.
Context matters here. GOOG just closed an $84.75B equity raise — mix of public offering, Berkshire private placement, and ATM program. Moody's called it credit positive. So you've got a freshly diluted cap structure AND a sell-side shop telling you the capex dollars will compound enough to justify it. That's the trade. Buffett writing the check on the private placement is the kind of stamp that makes the bull case feel less promotional.
"TD Cowen expects Alphabet's return on capital expenditure spending to ramp in 2027 and beyond."
The whole thesis hangs on that sentence. If 2027 ROCE inflects, the dilution is noise. If it doesn't, the multiple compresses.
Bull: AI infra spend looks scary on the income statement today, but 10x capex matched against 10x gigawatt capacity means the unit economics should improve, not deteriorate. Cloud is the vehicle — margins inflecting, AI revenue scaling alongside the build. PEG 0.6 is a flex valuation. Berkshire participation is a signal.
Bear: "$475 is barely above current levels" — if TD Cowen is the most aggressive shop and they're only modeling ~5% upside, the easy money's been made. Capex 10x'ing means D&A is also 10x'ing, and they're above consensus on that too — that gap closes either way the market doesn't like. AI Plus sub getting cut from $7.99 to $4.99 (more than 35% price cut) suggests they're getting aggressive on distribution to plant flags against OpenAI and Anthropic — good for share, less good for ARPU.
Verdict: Worth a nibble on weakness, not a chase. The 2027 ROCE inflection is the catalyst to watch — nothing in the next 4 quarters likely moves the needle on that thesis.
BofA still likes it, but the trade is a 2030 story, not a catalyst-driven one. They're modeling the bull case: if ASML beats the top end of its own guide and revenue hits ~€73B (vs. €60B at the high end), fixed costs (~20% of COGS) get absorbed and margins expand materially. Stock at $1,734, hugging the $1,831 52-week high — up 128% Y/Y. PT of $2,268 implies ~30% upside. Morgan Stanley separately raised to €1,660 on EUV demand. Buybacks keep ticking (60K shares, ~€79M recently).
"This scenario opens the door to gross margins above 60%, EBIT margins of 50%, and earnings per share exceeding €90 on or around 2030."
Versus LTM GM of 52.6% — that's real operating leverage if the revs come.
The Nikon noise is just noise — they're not in EUV. Real question for PMs: after a 128% rip, is 30% to PT enough to add here, or is this a trim-into-strength name until we get a pullback? The thesis is intact but you're buying a 4-year ramp at all-time highs. Not sure we can read too much into continued buybacks as a signal at these levels either — mgmt does this mechanically.
Verdict: stay long, buy any 5-7% wobble. Consensus is catching UP — not leading.
Cantor just took PT to $650 (from $575), Mizuho to $540, both Overweight/Outperform. Stock's +189% YoY, hugging 52W high at $526, $396B cap. The gap between Mizuho's $540 (essentially spot) and Cantor's $650 tells you everything about dispersion — someone sees a meaningfully steeper WFE ramp than consensus is modeling. Street playing catch-up on a name that hasn't really pulled back. That's the read.
"This is the first year in several where leading logic is actually outpacing ICAPS."
$526 is the line. Lose that on a close, algos take profit and the chase funds turn into sellers. Easy money's been made at +189% Y/Y — want a 5-7% pullback to add with both hands, not fighting tape into the print. Dividend's $0.53/qtr, IRR is irrelevant, this is a multiple-driven name. Risk is the slope, not the direction.
Verdict: The unbundling trade keeps working — and Arista's the cleanest way to play it. But at 51X P/E and 62% one-year return, you're paying for the next leg too.
Wolfe came out of meetings with CFO Breithaupt and IR head Araujo with a reiteration: Outperform, $175 PT (~23% upside). The setup is familiar but still working — hyperscalers, NeoClouds, and LLM builders are laser-focused on GPU utilization and token cost, which is driving them away from Nvidia's bundled networking toward best-of-breed options. Arista winning the unbundling (cleaner at high-entropy inference AND low-entropy training, so they can land neo accounts that historically took the bundle). New logos cited: Anthropic, Google. Trend more pronounced in US/EU than APAC — flag that for Asia-focused PMs.
TD Cowen to $200 from $170, Buy. Piper to $181 from $175, Overweight. Piper's the interesting one — they raised despite flagging growth constraints off the big run, which is the same dynamic you'd expect from a stock that's priced for execution. Wolfe's $175 sits below both, suggesting the bull case still requires some conviction. Cluster is $175-200 now, prior cluster was lower-$170s.
Better than what mgmt laid out on the Q1 call, per Wolfe, but still a constraint. Not resolved — just less bad. That's a tailwind if true, but the kind of color that can flip quarter-to-quarter, so don't anchor on it.
51.7X P/E, $191.6B MARKET CAP, and 30%+ revenue growth already in the price. The unbundling narrative is getting crowded — every networking name is pitching "post-Nvidia" right now. Supply is the gating factor, not demand, which means the next leg requires either a supply unlock or a multiple expansion. Both are harder than the 2024-25 move.
7060XE7 Series — 1.6T switching platforms, multiple cooling/port configs. Keeps the AI infra pitch fresh. Not a needle-mover on its own but extends the platform lead.
"The emergence of non-Nvidia accelerators for inference applications and increased Ethernet deployment are additional positives for Arista. The company excels in both high entropy inference and low entropy training environments, making it easier to win large new customers such as Anthropic and Google." — Wolfe Research
EPS $0.87 vs $0.81 est. Rev $2.71B vs $2.61B est. Clean beat on both lines. Q2 guide is the next data point — watch the supply commentary like a hawk.
Bottom line for the book: Core long stays. Don't chase into the print. If you're underweight, the right time to add was last fall; if you're at target weight, hold. Adding fresh size at 52X requires a view that the unbundling has another 2 years to run, not 2 quarters.
VERDICT: Initiating brokers lining up behind the inference-speed story. Real catalysts (OpenAI, Amazon) already in the bag, not aspirational.
Craig-Hallum launched Buy $325 this morning, slotting into a PT cluster that now spans $250-$340 across 6 initiations (Needham $300, Wedbush $270, Rosenblatt $300, Mizuho $300, Barclays $280). Street is in full love-fest mode. Stock at $233, so even the low end of the range implies double-digit upside, Craig-Hallum's print ~39%.
The thesis is the same everywhere — wafer-scale compute gives CBRS a real moat in AI inference speed. Not training, inference. That's the distinction that matters right now. Everyone's been building bigger brains; the next vector is how fast can you get answers back, and recent model tiers charging premiums for latency prove the market values it. CH pegs the inference TAM at $250B+ by EOY decade. Big number, but directionally consistent with everything we're hearing from hyperscalers.
"Most AI market history has centered around making models smarter and having them work on longer problems, but we see speed as another vector of value for AI inferencing." — Craig-Hallum
What separates CBRS from the parade of money-losing AI silicon IPOs: it's already LTM profitable, just printed $510M revenue +76% YoY, and landed OpenAI + Amazon as customers in the last 6 months. Those aren't pilot POCs — those are reference wins that legitimize the platform for every other scale player weighing alternatives to Nvidia. When the two biggest AI buyers on the planet sign your POs, you don't need to sell the dream anymore.
CBRS is a name PMs either already own and feel great about, or are watching and asking "is it too late." At $233 with a $250 low-end PT, the easy money's been made on the initiation wave. But the real call isn't today — it's whether inference speed becomes a durable budget line item at hyperscalers. If yes, $325-340 is conservative. If Nvidia bundles a credible latency play, this re-rates fast. Lean long into any dip, but don't chase green prints.
The verdict: NOW looks like a coiled spring. Stock's been bludgeoned — down 47% Y/Y at $107 — but the selloff has likely overshot if the platform stickiness thesis holds. Oppenheimer came out of their software bus tour incrementally positive, sticking with Outperform and a $130 PT (~22% upside). 64 customer interviews, multiple growth drivers, and a credible path to a 10%+ AI business exiting 2026. Not sure we can read too much into one bus tour, but the customer breadth gives it weight.
The bear case is the AI disruption overhang that's hung over the stock all year. Every enterprise SaaS name with a workflow/CRM adjacency has gotten punished on the thesis that AI-native upstarts eat their lunch. NOW hasn't been spared.
Oppenheimer's counter: investors are underappreciating platform stickiness. The 64-customer interview sweep gave them comfort that NOW's enterprise moat — once you're running mission-critical workflows, you don't rip and replace — remains intact through the AI transition. That's the core call here.
Opp sees a 2H26 setup for reacceleration into 2027, anchored on:
FY30 targets are described as "compelling" — meaningful when you're underwriting a name at a 47% drawdown. Gross margins at 76.5% give them room to invest without breaking the model.
Stock popped 10% on the recent software rally (general sector beta, not name-specific), but positioning still looks light given the move. $130 is the bogey — that's where shorts get squeezed and the "I told you so" crowd re-emerges. From $107, it's a clean tactical trade with a defined fundamental thesis underneath.
Talent watch: Former CMO Colin Fleming jumped to OpenAI. Read it however you want — exec departures to AI labs is a theme, not a NOW-specific red flag. But keep eyes on whether the AI platform team (Bardolliwalia's group) stays intact. That's the brain trust that has to execute.
Verdict: AI agent identity is the new narrative, but we're paying for it. UBS just took the street-high to $150 (from $115), citing early traction on Okta for AI Agents and Auth0 for AI Agents. Stock prints $121.44 — so the buy side is roughly 24% from the high PT and the average PT is still south of current. Mixed tape: most shops are raising on Q1 beats, but Mizuho downgraded to Neutral (still raised PT to $125). Reads like a story stock trying to round-trip its prior multiple compression.
Q1 was clean — beat on rev, op margin, FCF. cRPO +12% YoY vs. 10% guide/consensus. Rev growth ~12%, gross margins 77% (impressive, but identity has always printed elite GM). UBS has the stock at 23x CY26 EV/FCF for low-teens growth — fair, not cheap. The bull case is that the AI agent identity wedge isn't in the number yet.
"Conversations indicate that Okta for AI Agents and Auth0 for AI Agents are affecting customer expansions. Partners also expressed optimism about initial discussions around agentic identity with core access management vendors." — Roger Boyd, UBS
That's the line that matters. Partner channel confirming expansion motion, not just POC theater. If real, it's incremental bag on top of an already-stable core.
Cluster of PT hikes post-print: Cantor $125 (OW), DA Davidson $130 (Neutral — neutral?), Stifel $120 (Buy), Jefferies $120 (Buy), Mizuho $125 (downgraded to Neutral). Street range now $75–$150. The fact that DA Davidson sits at $130 with a Neutral tells you the fundamental camp sees the AI narrative as mostly priced in.
Bull: agentic identity becomes a must-have as enterprises deploy AI agents at scale. Okta's directory position is defensible. 23x FCF for a 12% grower with a credible new product vector isn't egregious. cRPO inflecting above guide = demand signal.
Bear: 12% growth in security is pedestrian. Crowded identity space (MSFT Entra, CyberArk, Palo Alto). AI agent identity is speculative — nobody knows the TAM or the pricing model yet. Mizuho's downgrade reads like "we like the print, we don't love the multiple at $120+." Stock's already popped on the narrative.
Upside to UBS $150 = ~24%. Downside to the $75 low-end PT = ~38% from here. R/R is fine but not fat. Better on weakness into mid-$100s than chasing into the UBS print. Watching the next two quarters of cRPO for confirmation the AI wedge is converting pipeline, not just generating headlines.
BMO FLAGS GOOGL AS #1 FULL-STACK AI PLAY. Outperform framing, not new info, but useful validation. BMO's 150-page AI framework ranks GOOGL first across all five subcategories — infra, models, products, physical AI, monetization. AMZN second. Google is the only name top-3 in everything. That's a positioning talking point if you need to defend a long into a tape that's been questioning AI capex ROI.
The hard data point: Google token processing volume +60% sequential in Q1 2026 to 16B TOKENS/MIN, hit 19B in April. That's adoption, not narrative. Anthropic ARR tracking ~$47B run-rate in May (Q2 rev guide $10.9B, doubling Q1's $4.8B) — and Anthropic runs on TPU/GCP infrastructure. Google's AI flywheel is tightening, even if the multiple hasn't fully re-rated.
"Google parent Alphabet ranked first in BMO Capital's Full Stack AI Score, placing in the top three across all subcategories including AI infrastructure, model and product offerings, physical AI, and monetization."
Bear case you still have to answer: frontier model pricing down 75%+ since 2024 — commoditization is real. And BMO flags the same infrastructure risk for everyone (power, grid, HBM bottlenecks through 2029-2030) plus lab cash burn compressing hyperscaler FCF. Search moat erosion is the perennial question; this report doesn't solve it, just frames Google as best-positioned even in a tougher environment.
Positioning read: GOOGL has lagged the AI complex year-to-date on search-disruption fears. BMO's framework is a useful counter-argument for the long book — "full-stack" means Google captures the compute layer (TPU/TPUv6 ramp), the model layer (Gemini), the distribution layer (Search, Workspace, Android), AND monetization (ads, Cloud). Few names can say that. Not a catalyst call, but a thesis anchor.
Needham fired the starter pistol on POWI with a Buy init and a $90 PT — and right on cue, the stock just gave back -12% IN A WEEK after a +100% rip over the last six months. So the question isn't the thesis, it's the setup. Stock's at $74.71 vs. the new $90 street-high PT (Stifel still at $82), so you've got ~20% to the new bogey on a name that's already 2x'd. The easy GaN trade is behind us. What's left is the harder trade — is the AI power penetration story still in the early innings or are we marking time?
Needham's David Williams is making the bull case on three legs: (1) POWI owns the ONLY COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE 1250V AND 1700V GaN PORTFOLIO in the market — that's a real tech moat, not marketing fluff, (2) the 800VDC DATA CENTER TAM IS ~$1B and POWI is positioned to capture share as hyperscalers migrate to higher-voltage architectures, and (3) new mgmt is focused on accelerating product cadence and opening new verticals. Layer in Stifel's read that POWI has identified a ~$500 PER-RACK CONTENT OPPORTUNITY when you stack auxiliary + main power, and you've got a credible AI infrastructure exposure story that isn't just another NVDA/AVGO proxy.
"Power Integrations' GaN portfolio is the only commercially available 1250V and 1700V rated solutions suitable for next generation high power applications." — Needham
Bull steelman: $500/rack x even modest rack volumes is a real revenue stream that doesn't exist in consensus today. Mgmt is new, the tech moat is defensible, and 800V DC architecture is a multi-year migration — POWI is a clean way to play it in a small-cap wrapper.
Bear steelman: Stock is up +100% IN 6 MONTHS on a narrative that's largely priced. Sub-$5B market cap means this thing moves 5-8% on a single print. Q1 was a clean beat (EPS $0.25 vs. $0.23, rev $108.3M vs. $106.6M) and the stock STILL dipped aftermarket — that's not a great tell when the print is good. And "structural tailwinds for long-term, sustainable growth" is analyst-speak for "we like it but the numbers aren't here yet." The GaN story is real, but the revenue ramp from $108M/qtr to whatever justifies the current tape is going to take time, and small caps don't get the benefit of the doubt in a risk-off tape.
Light coverage day, single name. POWI is a name to watch into the next print, not chase today. The -12% pullback is interesting but not enough to bottom-fish on its own — want to see the stock hold the recent base and ideally catch a bid on any further weakness into the $70 HANDLE. Needham's $90 is the bull-case marker; Stifel's $82 is the more grounded one. If you're long, you're playing for the GaN penetration curve. If you're not, you wait.
Verdict: Long the liquid cooling pick-and-shovel, consensus still anchoring too low. nVent's the most direct way to play AI thermal management without paying Nvidia multiples, and the Street's only just waking up. Stock at $163.80, up 142% Y/Y, and Bernstein just kicked off coverage with an Outperform at $218 — implying ~33% upside from here. Not chasing, but the path of least resistance is still up.
Bernstein's out of the gate flagging what a lot of folks missed: the market is systematically undervaluing NVT's data center systems protection business, so consensus FY28 EPS sits ~15% below where the buy-side expects it to land. The company just printed 40% LTM revenue growth and organic trends are still accelerating, particularly as cooling distribution unit (CDU) production ramps from new facilities. NVT's doubled production throughput over the past two years and is still hiring — brought in a senior supply chain leader plus multiple liquid cooling-specific roles. Not a business decelerating.
The moat here is real and getting deeper. NVT's established an NVIDIA partnership and is plugged into the Open Compute Project with Deschutes-compliant CDUs — Deschutes being the OCP spec that hyperscalers are standardizing around for liquid cooling. That's not a marketing claim, that's a design-in.
"Margins have been constrained by capacity investments... we expect operating leverage alone to push systems protection margins to the mid-20% range."
That's the kicker. Revenue's already inflecting; margins are still artificially depressed by the build-out. The operating leverage story writes itself once the capex moderates.
Fresh PT cluster (post-Q1 print) consolidating the brokers who covered it:
NVT just announced a new $500M three-year buyback authorization supplementing ~$96M remaining on the prior one. Almost $600M of dry powder against a mid-cap that's actually executing. Not the reason you own it, but it limits the downside skew while the AI thesis compounds.
Bull: CDU TAM is a 2027+ story, NVT is one of two OCP-Deschutes players, FY28 EPS still 15% too low, margins have a multi-year operating leverage runway, NVIDIA partnership is a credentialing event.
Bear: Up 142% in a year — multiple is no longer a "hidden gem," it's a priced-in growth name. Any AI capex digestion cycle hits NVT harder than a software peer. Hyperscaler concentration risk if NVIDIA/design-win momentum stalls.
Where I land: Bear case needs AI capex to actually decelerate, and every data point this quarter (and the next two quarters) points the other way. Own it, don't overpay for it — the $185-200 zone is where the Street catches up, $218 is where you trim.
THE READ: RUMORED PAUSE WASN'T A PAUSE. PROJECT ALIVE, MICROSOFT IS THE OFFTAKER, AND BE STILL HAS ITS 900MW FUEL CELL SLICE. RBC held Outperform and a $335 PT on the print, framing the Black Hills 1.8GW Cheyenne build as de-risked rather than impaired after Crusoe got shown the door. Market read it the right way — development partner swap is a process story, not a demand story.
WHAT MATTERS: Black Hills confirmed the datacenter is tracking to early 2028 service, directly with the large-load customer (read: MSFT) under the Large Power Contract Service tariff. The 1.8GW behind-the-meter plant splits 50/50 — 900MW OF BLOOM FUEL CELLS, 900MW GAS TURBINES. That fuel cell tranche is the real number for BE; it's the one that hits the backlog and underwrites the 2027-28 ramp narrative. The Bloomberg piece from Tuesday had Crusoe "pausing" the build and the algos did their thing, but this is a partner change, not a project cancel.
"Black Hills Corp. confirmed Wednesday morning that the 1.8 gigawatt project has not been paused."
CONTEXT YOU NEED: This is one of the larger single-site behind-the-meter fuel cell deployments publicly tracked. If BE can convert this into a repeatable template (utility + hyperscaler direct + fuel cell + gas turbine hybrid), the multiple-expansion story gets a lot more durable than just "data center power is tight." Watch for: (1) any update on the 900MW fuel cell order timing/PO, (2) whether MSFT leaks the site via its own capex disclosures, and (3) the next leg of the Microsoft-utility pipeline — this likely isn't a one-off.
NOT A CLEAN PRINT: Black Hills missed Q1 — $1.79 EPS VS $1.90 STREET, $780.7M REV VS $868.4M — blaming weather and merger costs. Doesn't change the BE thesis (utility execution ≠ BE orders) but worth flagging if you're building a paired long. Utility is levered (D/E 1.18, ~15% YIELD) so a $5.45B mkt cap player doing a 1.8GW build is a real capital allocation event — they need this project to pencil.
STEELMAN BOTH SIDES: Bull — fuel cells just won a slot in a hyperscaler-direct, utility-backed build; template is now proven. Bear — partner swap (Crusoe out) raises the usual execution questions and gas turbines taking 50% of the site caps the fuel cell TAM per project. We're in the bull camp but it's not a slam dunk that 100% of the 1.8GW hybrid model is the standard go-forward.
LEVELS TO WATCH: $335 RBC PT is the bogey. Stock's been a momentum name all year — any pullback on project noise is likely buyable given the 2028 service start gives a multi-quarter setup window.
RBC just ripped the PT to $315 from $250 — that's a 26% raise on top of a stock already up ~119% YoY. They're sticking with Outperform and the move is all about Hyve re-rating, not the legacy distribution biz. The thesis: SNX is morphing from a low-multiple IT distributor into something the market is finally pricing like a hyperscaler-adjacent AI play. P/E 22.6, PEG 0.45 — for a name printing ~70% EPS growth, that's still cheap even after the rip.
RBC's David Paige flags that Hyve now has programs with all five major U.S. hyperscalers — each one framed as a ~$1B-plus opportunity. That math is what gets the bear case off the mat. The margin trajectory does the rest: Hyve running 27% margin contribution in Q1 FY26, targeting 40% by FY27. RBC calls that 40% target potentially conservative given customer diversification, traditional compute focus, and new leadership. If they hit 40% a year early, the FY27 PT looks low.
RBC's $315 framework is SOTP at 15.5x P/E — not heroic for a name compounding at this clip. They're also above consensus on estimates, which is what we want to see from a PT raise in a name that's already worked.
This isn't just RBC. The whole sell-side pile-on has been moving in the same direction: RJ $200 (Strong Buy), UBS $265, BofA $270, and now RBC at $315 leading the high end. The $200-$315 cluster is wide because analysts are still fighting over how much of Hyve's hyperscaler pipeline to credit in the model. The dispersion itself is a tell — earlier in the move you had RJ anchoring low, now RBC is stretching the ceiling. That's how multi-stage re-ratings work: low ballers catch up last.
Near 52-wk high is the obvious concern, and +119% in a year means positioning is probably extended. But with EPS growth ~70% and a PEG under 0.5, the bogey isn't valuation — it's execution. If Hyve margin slips or any of the hyperscaler programs stall, this name gives back ground fast. The risk/reward still skews long into a Q2 print, but we're not adding fresh here without a pullback into the $250s.
Citizens stays Market Outperform, $49 PT intact. The print that matters: 1.7X 2027E EV/Revenue, 21% FCF yield, 60.75% gross margin, $3.15B market cap. This is a cheap, cash-generative data infrastructure name with a credible AI story that the market is barely pricing. Q1 FY26 already beat clean — $0.88 vs $0.69 EPS, $444M vs $428.84M rev — and Citizens isn't flinching post-print. The trade here isn't heroic top-line growth, it's a value-with-optionality setup.
Teradata sits at an interesting intersection right now. Enterprise AI is moving from pilot to production, and that shift requires governed, high-performance data infrastructure — exactly what TDC's hybrid architecture was built for. Citizens framed it bluntly:
"Companies need governed, contextualized, and high-performance data infrastructure to move AI workloads from pilots into production."
The bull case is straightforward: hybrid positioning becomes more relevant as customers weigh public cloud vs on-prem based on security, sovereignty, and inference cost. (Inference cost is the one nobody was talking about 18 months ago and is now a board-level issue.) Management bench looks solid — McMillan/Ederer/Arora — and the new CDAO/CIO Josh Fecteau hire is a signal they're serious about the AI narrative.
Bull: 7.6X P/E, 21% FCF yield, $140B TAM per Gartner, and a possible takeout candidate (Citizens flagged PE). A 1.7X EV/Revenue multiple for a profitable, FCF-positive data platform in 2027 is genuinely cheap by software standards. Any re-rating from AI infra spend or M&A chatter is asymmetric.
Bear: Competitive market, slow organic growth narrative hasn't broken, and at this valuation the market is essentially saying "show me." The hybrid-on-prem angle is a feature for some customers and a bug for others. (Cloud-native purists have already moved on.)
Reiterated Outperform at $49 with a clean quarter in the rearview and a new AI product cycle launching. Light coverage today but the setup is hard to argue with on a multiples basis. Watch for follow-through at the Autonomous Intelligence World Tour — product traction is the next catalyst to validate the re-rating.
Verdict: Priced for the theme. MS kicks off coverage EW/$23 against a $22.31 print — that's ~3% upside to a name already 3% off its 52-week high. The whole Street lands in a $22.50-$24 cluster, so nobody's getting paid to chase here. Trade is execution on the blind-pool, not multiple expansion (PTs within ~8% of each other is a tell).
"BXDC's return profile is highly dependent on capital markets execution and acquisition discipline. The blind-pool structure requires investors to underwrite Blackstone's ability to source and close attractive acquisitions in a competitive asset class, while poor initial share price performance could increase the cost of capital and limit the accretive acquisition flywheel." — Morgan Stanley
"Tesla has effectively achieved Level 4 autonomy in most conditions." — Piper Sandler
The bull case in one sentence. Whether you believe it IS the trade.
JPM initiated BELFB at Overweight this morning with a $370 bogey, calling for ~30% upside from the print at $276. This is a turnaround story dressed up in an aerospace/defense connector shell — and the catalyst isn't top-line, it's margin. Company runs on an ~80% FIXED COST STRUCTURE, and JPM sees adjusted EBITDA margin expanding to 22.1% in 2026 and 23.4% in 2027, with FCF conversion getting back to ~100% by '27. That's the trade. Revenue growth is fine but not the point — 17% to $792M in '26, 8% to $857M in '27. The point is operating leverage once the new bench (rebuilt 2021-early 2026) gets pricing discipline and on-time delivery dialed.
"The executive bench was rebuilt from 2021 through early 2026, sharpening accountability, pricing discipline, and delivery performance, supported by process visibility observed at the Cinch Waseca site." — JPMorgan
The Cinch Waseca site visit matters for credibility here. This isn't a financial model flex — JPM did the work on the ground, which gives the margin glide path more weight than usual. End-market mix (A&D, data centers, telecom, industrial) is solid, and the data center buildout is a real tailwind nobody's pricing in enough.
Bull case is straightforward: fixed costs + new management + cleaner execution = margin expansion that consensus is still under-modeling. If JPM is right on the 22-23% EBITDA path, this thing earns through the multiple even after the run.
Bear case is the chart. +248% IN A YEAR. Stock's already trading above fair value per Pro models, and 30% upside to a $370 PT isn't exactly a wide r/r when you're buying a name that's already worked. Hard to chase here into a fresh initiation. The bear would argue a lot of the operational cleanup is now in the price and you need an execution slip or guide-down to get a real entry.
Story is real, numbers are real, but the easy money's been made. We'd want to see a 10-15% pullback before getting involved — initiation-driven momentum can carry it a few bucks, but the r/r isn't compelling at the tape. Watch the next quarter for evidence the margin trajectory is tracking JPM's model. If they print even in line with the 22.1% '26 EBITDA bogey, this probably works. If they miss, the stock gives back the initiation premium fast.
Nomura/Instinet bumped PT to JPY9,590 from JPY9,090, Buy stays. Underlying NAV/share sits at JPY10,370, so the PT is just NAV with a 7.5% discount (widened from 5%). Read that right — they raised the target AND widened the discount. Reason: Arm now comprises a bigger slice of NAV, so they're pricing in more conservatism as the Arm weight grows. That's the right way to underwrite a compounder.
The bull case hasn't changed: Arm CPUs are getting a real seat at the agentic AI table. Both Nvidia's GTC Taipei (June 1) and Computex (June 2) made the point that CPUs aren't bystanders in the agentic era — they're expanding into apps, security, memory, AND orchestration. That narrative is why Arm's medium-term plan (FY3/31: $15B AGI CPU sales, 30%+ adj op margin) starts to look conservative.
"Underlying demand was already ahead of its projections." — Arm at Computex, re: FY3/31 plan
Not sure we can read too much into that — every semis company says demand is ahead of plan. But when Arm says it, with this customer base and the Nvidia halo, you at least lean in.
Estimates bottoming + record prediction market volumes + Rothera JV monetization = the bull case is reloading. Truist reiterates Buy at $100, Cantor higher at $110 — both see the next leg up.
Stock was BURIED (down 38% over six months sitting in the low $80s) and now back to ~$91. The setup here is clean: May operating data was genuinely strong outside of crypto, and the sell-side cohort is converging on "estimates trough this quarter." If that's right, we're looking at a setup where the print beats the lowered bar and the stock works on the way up.
Key data points from the May read: PLATFORM ASSETS $377B (+9% MoM, +48% YoY), $5.6B NET DEPOSITS, 27.7M FUNDED CUSTOMERS, and REVENUE +41.5% TTM. Prediction markets and equities hit record volumes, options activity solid, margin balances at a record. That's a healthy mix — not a one-trick pony quarter.
The two things that keep this from being a clean long:
Cantor's higher $110 PT cites the Rothera JV (with Susquehanna) as the underappreciated piece — basically Robinhood building infrastructure to monetize the prediction market volume that hit records in May. Smart positioning if event contracts continue to scale.
The trade: Long with a bias that the Q2 print clears a low bar. The $90 area is a much better entry than the $115+ levels we were at earlier this year. R/R looks favorable here if you're patient on the crypto drag fading. Not a homerun name — more of a grinding share-gainer with idiosyncratic catalysts.
Verdict: closing arb with a 4% spread and a June catalyst. Underlying biz is fine — soft Q4, but FC and Apex are showing up. Not chasing into the print, not fading either. The World Cup content cycle is the new variable nobody's pricing.
Stock is sitting ~$204, just off the 52-week high of $204.88 with a 38% LTM gain baked in. Argus downgraded to Hold last week, and Bonner's logic is purely the arb math: shares 4% below the PE consortium offer. That's the trade now — you're not buying FC franchise quality, you're clipping the spread to close (deal expected June). Upside to offer is your floor; downside is a deal break, which feels low-probability given where the consortium is in the process.
Underlying engine is healthier than the Q4 print suggested. FY26 record net bookings of $8.026B (+9% YoY), record operating cash flow of $2.553B (+23% YoY) — the Battlefield 6 launch clearly worked and live services are compounding. Q4 was the soft quarter: EPS $1.81 vs $2.39 consensus, net bookings $1.86B vs $1.98B est. Stale comp, mostly. Not the quarter to underwrite the deal to.
Raymond James flagged solid May data — Apex Legends strong post-seasonal launch, FC trends on script as domestic league seasons wrap. The interesting setup is the World Cup cycle starting and the competitive field around it:
"EA Sports FC is not coasting despite the competition. The company has announced a full slate of content around the World Cup within the bounds of its licensing arrangements."
The risk is FC's licensing arrangement (not the World Cup itself, which EA doesn't have rights to) limits how directly they can tie into the tournament narrative. The bear steelmans from that — Netflix has the official FIFA license, and a casual viewer who plays Netflix's free thing for two weeks during the World Cup isn't buying FC points. The bull steelman: FC is a 12-month engagement loop, not a two-week tournament product, and the content slate keeps DAUs sticky while the World Cup pulls net-new eyes to the franchise.
If you're not in, the spread is 4% to a June close — that math works on a 3-month view if you believe deal certainty is high. If you're long the fundamentals, you're late — the easy money's in the takeout, and post-close the equity goes away anyway. Not a fresh long here. Existing holders hold into close; arb specialists clip the spread. Everything else is noise until deal prints or breaks.
Comps get uglier before they get better, and the $3B buyback is a floor — not a catalyst. RBLX at $43, 54% OFF the 12-month high, hugging the 52-week low of $40.15. Street PTs cluster $45-60, with bears flagging Fortnite risk and bulls pointing to concurrent user resilience.
Trade as a name where you want post-July data before pressing the bid. Buyback cushions downside near $40, but the next 6 weeks are air cover for shorts. Not chasing.
Stifel takes PT to $432 from $395 (Buy) on the Intel 14A DTCO collab. CDNS at $403.56, +26% YTD, 52W high of $416.69 essentially tapped. Stock's already done the work — question for new money is whether the Intel 14A tailwind extends into a real foundry node or stays a one-off design win.
The 14A deal validates Cadence's agentic AI tooling and Design IP positioning in leading-edge workflows, while expanding footprint at a node that could become a meaningful customer acquisition vector for Intel Foundry.
Two things matter here. (1) CDNS remains UNDER INDEXED at Intel on the design side, so the call option on future wins is real. (2) Multi-year deal structure adds BACKLOG DURATION — a different multiple argument than spot-quarter EPS, and a real differentiator vs. a pure project-revenue read. Also worth noting BofA's already on board at $400, so this isn't a one-analyst flag.
Backdrop's already good and getting better:
Bull: agentic AI tools + IP + foundry penetration = compounder keeps compounding, multiple re-rates on duration visibility. Bear: you're paying up at a 52W high into a customer (Intel) with real 14A execution risk — the foundry has to actually land the node for the multiple expansion thesis to play through. Not broken R/R, just not asymmetric at +26% YTD. Better tape on a pullback into the high $300s.
(Also: the Mizuho Neutral-on-Intel note floating around is a reminder that the demand-side story here has a counterparty risk nobody can model precisely yet.)
RBC cut to $70 from $95, still Outperform, but the chart's the story. ZG is $35.83, down ~51% over six months, and within a whisker of the 52-week low at $34.50. The RBC call is really a multiple reset — "more pragmatic multiple" in light of the AI overhang — and they explicitly say actual business risk from AI is low. Translation: the cut is about narrative, not numbers. Bull case still hinges on the enhanced market strategy continuing to deliver faster-than-market growth, and RBC's work suggests 2026 Street has acceleration priced in while 2027 might have a touch of deceleration (so set up right, you could get a beat).
"Actual business risk from AI remains low in the firm's view. Despite the recent selloff."
PT range out there is all over the place: Cantor $41 (Neutral), DA Davidson $60 (Buy), Citizens $75 (Mkt Outperform), RBC $70 (OP), prior high $95 cluster. That's a $41–$95 spread on a $36 stock — dispersion means conviction is thin. Bull path: enhanced market share-gaining markets nearly tripling by 2028 with Premier Agent reaccelerating in '27. Bear path: housing is stagnant, Google is testing listing ads in several US markets (real competitive pressure), and the Compass/MRED lawsuit saga is messy. Q1 was fine — rev in-line, EBITDA beat by 8% per Visible Alpha — so this is a positioning/AI-overhang trade, not a fundamentals breakdown. R/R looks interesting down here if you can stomach the narrative risk; PMs looking for a deep value TMT name with a real estate recovery call attached.
RJ hosted CFO Stefan Murry this week, came away reaffirming Outperform/$160. Two things matter: (1) Innolight just got 1260H'd, validating the domestic-onshoring thesis AAOI has been pitching for 18 months, and (2) mgmt's 2H27 capacity target implies $6B in annualized revenue — versus RJ's more sober ~$3B annualized model. Texas tooling lands in JULY. CPO optionality into AMD/Amazon for external laser modules ($500-$1,000 ASPs) is a 2028+ free call.
"The optical transceiver market remains supply constrained, and Applied Optoelectronics has outlined plans to reach monthly production over $450 million by mid-2027." — Raymond James
That $6B vs $3B spread is the whole thing. RJ is telling you "we believe the story but we're modeling 50% of what mgmt is implying on capacity." That's either conservative underwriting or a tell that fill rates are uncertain. Given the Innolight 1260H development, I'd lean toward the former — hyperscalers are now actively looking to diversify away from Chinese suppliers, and AAOI is one of the few US-domiciled pure plays with capacity coming online in the right window.
Execution. Going from current revenue base to $6B annualized in ~18 months is a multi-X ramp by any historical measure. If hyperscaler orders slow, or if Innolight routes around the entity listing (Vietnam capacity, third-country transshipment, etc.), AAOI gets stuck with Texas capex it can't fill. The CFO is also out there telling a story to investors — sell-side conferences are where management sells the dream, not where they walk back targets.
Stock has been a high-beta AI optical name — trades with COHR, LITE, the semis beta complex. After the recent run it's not cheap on near-term numbers, but the 2H27 setup is real if mgmt executes. Don't make it a binary — size it as a call on US optical onshoring with the $3B RJ base case as the more likely print.
Truist flips to Buy, $39 PT (22x adj EPS). The thesis boils down to Managed Markets GMV quadrupling and adding 4-5pp to top-line in '27/'28, plus the Passport deal widening the fulfillment moat. Upgrade looks right to us — Q1 was a clear beat (GMV +40%, rev +33%, adj EBITDA +59%, margin +330bps) and the new $500M buyback signals management confidence. Shares at $32.38 leave ~20% to the Truist bogey and probably more to consensus '28 if they're already high single digits ahead.
Bulls have the receipts: top-line acceleration, margin expansion tracking well above plan, and Passport layering in fulfillment capability just as cross-border volume inflects. Take rate pressure from multi-local and the Shopify Managed Markets re-papering is the real overhang, but Truist thinks duty drawback adoption offsets enough to keep the model intact. GAAP EPS 52% CAGR '26-'28 is aggressive but not insane given the Q1 print and the buyback backstop.
Bears will point to valuation catching up fast, SBC still heavy (which is why Truist's 22x uses adj EPS with comp as a real expense — the right way to think about it), and execution risk on integrating Passport mid-year. Hard to argue with the trajectory though — when GMV inflects and EBITDA margin expands 330bps in the same quarter, you ride it until it breaks.
"The firm expects adoption of newer products like duty drawbacks to partially offset take rate pressures from the shift to multi-local and a new arrangement with Shopify for the Managed Markets offering." — Truist
Other desks (Benchmark, Needham, UBS) all reiterated Buy post-Q1. The buy-side view: clean print, clear catalyst path through Passport close, and the buyback removes a chunk of the float overhang. We'd be long here.
RJ STRETCHES THE CEILING TO $425 — strong buy maintained, $300 prior. Stock at $362, sitting 6% off the 52w high after a 104% run. Last quarter was a 23% revenue print with 5.3% core margins and $2.69 EPS beating the midpoint. May quarter lands June 17 — that's the next test.
RJ's call isn't really about the next print. It's about the re-rating. Currently trading at 48x P/E but a PEG OF 0.6 — investors are looking through near-term to "broad-based growth" beyond just AI programs. RJ says PMs are getting comfortable pricing in a mid-20s multiple. That's the gap.
"Jabil is expected to face some limitations due to supply constraints for datacenter gear, with at least some relief anticipated in fiscal year 2027. Management has been careful to manage expectations in a relatively conservative manner." — Melissa Fairbanks, Raymond James
That supply constraint is the obvious bogey. If datacenter gear is the bottleneck, you can't print a blowout until FY27. But — and this is the bull case — conservative management guiding up is a feature, not a bug. Gradual margin expansion with growth diversifying beyond AI = the re-rating thesis stays intact.
CONSENSUS CLUSTER: BofA $354 (AI rev $13.1B FY26), Stifel $290, UBS $273. RJ NOW THE OUTLIER HIGH at $425. The fact that the bull analyst is willing to print 17% above current is telling — they're not fading this name into the print.
STEELMAN: At 48x P/E and 104% off the lows, you've paid for the re-rating. Supply chain constraints cap the next two quarters. If May quarter is "in-line" you get a rug pull — multiple compression to 35-40x on a 23% grower is a 15-20% air pocket. PEG works backwards too.
STEELMAN BULL: BofA's $13.1B AI revenue number for FY26 is real revenue, not a TAM slide. Datacenter capacity relief in FY27 unsticks the only constraint. Margins expanding from 5.3% to mid-single-digit-plus with the mix shift toward AI infra = the mid-20s P/E becomes a value multiple on FY27 numbers. You're not paying 48x for FY26 — you're paying 25-30x for FY27.
R/R INTO 6/17: Not a fresh-money name here, but if you own it, we wouldn't trim into the print either. Setup is either "blowout + supply relief commentary" = leg to $400, or "in-line + no new color" = base it and don't chase. Reads like a hold, not a buy or sell, at these levels.
Hearing the HBM "High-Bandwidth Mistake" critique is circulating on CT — narrative pushback on the HBM architecture, framing it as a near-term limitation that flips to a long-term moat for whoever solves it. D-grade noise on the sentiment side, but the persistence of the critique is worth flagging if you're running HBM book. The Goldman revisions are the data, not this tweet.
Channel checks suggest MLCC distributor hoarding is now confirmed across multiple distributors, with allocations being redirected to AI server builds. ABF substrate prices up 20% YTD on similar dynamics. The component inflation is bleeding into adjacent pools faster than consensus captured — PC ODM 2H26 production cuts 15-18% YoY is the demand-side confirmation.
Word is the Apple smart glasses (late 2027) frame is "Watch-upending-mechanical-watches" scope, not just a Meta competitor. Cross-read: EssilorLuxottica and Safilo mid-tier exposure is the asymmetric play if Apple's eyewear is positioned as full eyewear-industry disruption. Less covered name, potential alpha if the disruption framing catches on.
Hearing OpenAI Sora team became the robotics team — physical-world agents re-prioritized at frontier lab level. Hiring push is real. Doesn't directly map to a listed ticker today, but the broader implication is that the modality frontier is expanding beyond text/image/video into physical world. Read-through to humanoid/autonomy names.
Channel checks suggest Anthropic is closing the ~1GW compute gap with OpenAI via xAI sublease — confirms the sublease market is now structurally active. Implication: neocloud inventory is being routed to the highest bidder, not necessarily the original lessor. The 90-day optionality deal structure on xAI is the new market norm.
Word is the glass core substrate evaluation is on a ~2028 production timeline for high-end packaging. Multi-year substrate innovation roadmap is real — parallel to 800VDC and rack-density transitions. Implication: TSMC and the substrate suppliers are preparing for the next packaging transition now, not after the CoWoS ceiling is hit.
Hearing the "AI harness wars 2027" framing is gaining traction in dev/CT circles — skill files and OSS retrieval layers (GBrain cited) as the defining browser-war battle. Memory/knowledge portability as the contested substrate. The model-orchestration layer is where frontier-model cost is being routed around. Early signal, not a ticker catalyst yet, but the framing matters for anyone modeling the value capture at the orchestration layer.
Channel checks suggest "context is the moat" thesis is being validated by Vista's $8M→$200K insurance workflow as the empirical benchmark. First clean public datapoint on enterprise ROI. The vertical SaaS platform trade (PLTR, Agentforce, ServiceNow) is now data-backed rather than narrative. Resolves on whether replication happens — how many enterprises have equivalent proprietary context.
Word is iOS 27 Siri app will sync chats across devices like ChatGPT/Claude/Gemini apps. Cross-device assistant model validated at the platform layer. Implication: Apple is positioning to be the OS-level orchestrator for AI assistants, not just the model host. The "Apple as the AI consumer layer" framing gets more material.
Hearing data center projects in higher-power-cost geographies (notably Europe per the Iran-US channel) are likely to migrate to lower-cost locations mid-build. Even the SoftBank France €75B / 5GW commitment could shift locus. Implication: geography is becoming a real risk variable in AI infra underwriting — the early-mover advantage goes to whoever locks in the lowest-cost power first.
Channel checks suggest memory LTAs are more fragile than the pricing power implies. Suppliers expected to break agreements when supply/demand balance shifts. The SNDK 78.3% gross margin print is real but the contractual underpinning is weak. Watch the renewal calendar — first major LTA renewal cycle is the test of pricing stickiness.
Word is behind-the-meter / co-location remains the only path to add GW outside the 3-7yr grid queue. The grid-connected SoftBank France build is the slow path, and the implication is that the behind-the-meter economics (VST, OKLO, GNRC) have a structural floor under them regardless of utility capex. The constraint hasn't rotated, and behind-the-meter is the only escape valve.
Hearing the AI DC cost is now $3.5M/MW vs. $1.5M/MW for traditional, with rack densification (>220kW → 300kW+) as the lever. No fresh rack-density datapoint in today's feed, but the cost ratio is the structural margin opportunity for the BOM suppliers (cooling, switchgear, PDU). Schneider's positioning as SoftBank France industrial partner is the data point on the margin expansion.
Word is Anthropic and OpenAI are now competing on the inference cost curve, not just the training capex curve. The price war narrative isn't about subscription pricing yet — it's about API pricing for inference at scale. Read-through: if Anthropic closes the compute gap via xAI sublease, the inference price war accelerates. Application layer ASP/NRR assumption breaks if model cost keeps falling.