Wall Street is buzzing this week? Here are the top 5 buying calls from Wall Street’s best analysts this week from May 12 to 16, and the best five selling calls.
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The first 5 purchase phone numbers:
1. Wolf upgrades Pinterest outperforms the ball in "reasonable" valuation
Wolfe Research upgrades Pinterest (PIN) to outperform peers, with a target price of $40. The company said the first-quarter earnings and second-quarter guidance gave Wolf, who noted the rationale for its recent performance advertising product cycle in mid-March, further proof of the platform's basic health. The company added that now the U.S. and China have reached a trade deal that the company will be more confused than before and thinks the current valuation is "highly reasonable."
2. Wells upgrades Cisco to AI orders with heavy momentum
Wells Fargo upgraded Cisco to overweight with a price target of $75, up from $72 after the fiscal year report. The company cites the company's AI power to accelerate for the upgrade. Cisco's orders of three-thirds of the six largest high standards grew triple-digit year-on-year in the third quarter and accelerated across all six customers. Wells believes that besides Webscale momentum, Cisco appears to be a visible player in large-scale sovereign AI opportunities. With confidence in the recovery of normal order growth, the company believes Cisco will show continuous earnings upside and a "value re-evaluation story."
3. Argus upgrades Wayfair to buy market share growth expectations
Argus upgraded Wayfair (W) is purchased from Hold for a price target of $40. Analysts point out that reluctance to buy new homes at high prices, many homeowners are upgrading furniture, which they expect to benefit from Wayfair, which the company believes could gain market share, while buying more and more household goods online. Argus cites the company's "strong" distribution network and "large amount of products."
4. Monness Crespi Upgrade Coinbase and Q2 Guide Looks "Conservative"
Monness Crespi's upgraded Coinbase (Coin) purchases from neutral purchases at a price target of $300, telling investors that the company's subscription and service revenues range from $600 million to $680 million, now looks "increasingly conservative" and considering the underlying assets of the base assets, especially Ethereum and Solana, especially in Ethereum and Solana, especially during Fiscal Q2 Q2, the product should allow block Q2 offer Conderch, which should cross the Q2 block the of the forect.
5. Oppenheimer upgrades the charter to outperform performance, calling Cox's deal "mainly positive"
After the company announced a purchase price that was valuated by the latter at a purchase price of $34.5B, Oppenheimer upgraded Charter (CHTR) to a target of $500 with a price target of $500. The company noted that Charter has been improving its balance sheet and will trade in full ratings. Oppenheimer expects massive buybacks and a decline in capital expenditures will drive a "significant improvement" in free cash flow in 2027. The company called Cox Deal a "main positive" with an estimated $100 per share in 2030.
The first 5 sales phone numbers:
1. Poor performance when targeting downgrade to Bernstein
Bernstein lowered its TGT to underperforming markets, with a target of $82, down from $97. "For the target, progress is getting harder," the company said, telling investors in a research note that credit card data "draw a bleak picture" of the company's first quarter, suppressed by poor weather, weaker consumer sentiment and DEI-related strikes. Bernstein believes that this is all before tariffs “go into the framework,” meaning the target may have to lower guidance throughout the year. It believes the goal faces a difficult trade-off between stimulating sales growth and maintaining profit margins. The company's analysis shows that "none of these is possible, and more and more."
2. Cut tariff-related uncertainty Wayfair for sale at Loop Capital
Loop Capital downgrades Wayfair for sale from Hold for a price target of $35. The stock rallied 20% after China's tariffs fell to 145% to 30%, but the company's downgrade was driven by tariff-related uncertainty. The market price is much lower than Vietnam’s original “countdown” rate below 46%, and most investors believe that the rate will be much lower than China’s rate, but the uncertainty of the tariffs is too high that the company advises investors to avoid stocks.
3. DADavidson cuts Coreweave to underperforming, saying "not a business worth expanding"
DA Davidson lowered Coreweave (CRWV) to a constant target of $36. The first detailed earnings report and its updated practical and guidance confirms the company's concerns about CoreWeave "is not a business worth expanding, and we question the value of equity." Da Davidson argues that it is not worth expanding if Coreweave generates only 5% return on assets and has to pay 12.5% interest on the debt required to obtain those assets, and believes that "this capital damage is a problem of undersized scale" that a company earns $4B of revenue. running Rates have already run 33 data centers.
4. Overweight relegation to underweight at Barclays
Barclays lowered the weight of Enphase Energy (ENPH) to overweight with a target price of $40, under $51. The company said it could repeal Section 25d "already flew under radar and is now taking a bite." Barclays told investors in a research note that Section 25D enables individual homeowners to claim a 30% tax credit for solar and storage devices. The company said that since enphase has always dominated the non-third-party ownership market and its market share is in the weaker aspects of the TPO market, eliminating this tax credit has negatively impacted the company's prospects. Barclays predicts that if the 25D 25D is abolished, the residential solar market may develop into more than 90% of third-party ownership. It estimates that Sunrun (Run) is the largest third-party owner, followed by Sunnova Energy (Nova).
Market performance declined at BMO Capital to poor performance Enphase Energy
BMO Capital lowered Enphase Energy's underperformance, with its target target of $39, below $46, following the House's Ways and Means Committee's tax plan. The plan will be a homeowner who pays loans or cash for its residential solar and battery systems by the end of 2025 to cancel the 25D Resident Clean Energy Credit, which the company believes is "disproportionate" to eliminate the impact of the 25D credit, the company told investors. BMO believes that this will narrow the overall demand for U.S. residential solar in 2026, which further leads to the loss of market share of Enphase.
5. Solaredge downgraded to Northland
Northland lowered Solaredge (SEDG) from underperforming the market with a target price of $15.50. The company noted that since April 25, the company has turned around in a difficult macro environment, uncertainty in U.S. tax policy and tariff uncertainty. Northland added that despite the reduced tariff risk, it “didn’t go away”, which lowered the ratings due to the valuation.
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