PepsiCo downgraded, HubSpot upgraded: Wall Street's top analyst calls
PepsiCo downgraded, HubSpot upgraded: Wall Street's top analyst calls
PepsiCo downgraded, HubSpot upgraded: Wall Street's top analyst calls
Business automation software provider Upland Software (NASDAQ: UPLD) met Wall Street’s revenue expectations in Q4 CY2024, but sales fell by 5.8% year on year to $68.03 million. On the other hand, next quarter’s revenue guidance of $62 million was less impressive, coming in 7.7% below analysts’ estimates. Its non-GAAP profit of $0.41 per share was significantly above analysts’ consensus estimates.
As the Q4 earnings season comes to a close, it’s time to take stock of this quarter’s best and worst performers in the education services industry, including Lincoln Educational (NASDAQ:LINC) and its peers.
Growth boosts valuation multiples, but it doesn’t always last forever. Companies that cannot maintain it are often penalized with large declines in market value, a lesson ingrained in investors who lost money in tech stocks during 2022.
The $10-50 price range often includes mid-sized businesses with proven track records and plenty of growth runway ahead. They also usually carry less risk than penny stocks, though they’re not immune to volatility as many lack the scale advantages of their larger peers.
Stocks under $10 pique our interest because they have room to grow (as well as the most affordable option contract premiums). That doesn’t mean they’re bargains though, and we urge investors to be careful as many have risky business models.
The low valuation multiples for value stocks provide a margin of safety that growth stocks rarely offer. However, the challenge lies in determining whether these cheap assets are genuinely undervalued or simply on sale due to their potentially deteriorating business models.
Stocks trading in the $1-10 range are generally smaller players with less risk than their penny stock counterparts. But that doesn’t mean the underlying businesses are cheap, and we advise caution as many have questionable fundamentals.
Software is eating the world, and virtually no business is left untouched by it. Companies bringing it to life have been rewarded with explosive earnings growth, and the upward trend shows no signs of stopping - over the past six months, the industry has posted a gain of 9.1% while the S&P 500 was flat.
Value investing has created more billionaires than any other strategy, like Warren Buffett, who built his fortune by purchasing wonderful businesses at reasonable prices. But these hidden gems are few and far between - many stocks that appear cheap often stay that way because they face structural issues.