Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Friday:
Oppenheimer raised its price target and says it sees a “long subscriber runway” for Netflix.
“Maintaining Outperform rating and increasing price target to $1,425 (was $1,200) based on 2030E.”
Goldman says Adobe has “AI momentum” following earnings on Thursday.
“We reiterate our Buy rating and $570 PT following Adobe’s F2Q25 results.”
Morgan Stanley says Tesla remains extramely well positioned in “data, robotics, energy, AI, manufacturing and supporting infrastructure.”
“While there are a growing number of US efforts to push the boundaries of physical AI, we struggle to think of any other company as well positioned as Tesla in terms of data, robotics, energy, AI, manufacturing and supporting infrastructure (from fleet fulfillment to communications network, etc).”
Wolfe downgraded the stock on valuation.
“We are downgrading GEV from OP to PP rating.”
Oppenheimer said it’s feeling even more bullish on the stock following the company’s 2025 Coinbase State of Crypto Summit.
“We believe COIN can command a valuation premium compared to HOOD, and will take advantage of current dislocation to get blockchain exposure.”
Bank of America says AMD is establishing itself as the “next-best AI vendor.”
“We attended AMD’s Advancing AI Event in San Jose where AMD provided an update to its end-to-end AI infrastructure platform. Similar to last AI event in Oct-2024, investor expectations might have been high, but we highlight its continued execution in AI roadmap, customer/ecosystem proliferation, and software maturity.”
Bank of America says the appliance maker is “relatively well positioned for appliance tariffs.”
“We upgrade Whirlpool to Neutral (from Underperform) and raise our PO to $94 (from $68) now based on 7.3x our 26E EV/EBITDA.”
Wells raised its price target on the stock to $565 per share from $515.
“Recall MSFT disclosed $13B in AI revenue run-rate making it the clear outright leader in AI to date. MSFT benefits from having a vertically integrated approach towards AI, offering hardware (AI accelerators like Maia), infrastructure (Azure AI), and software (Copilots), where it can provide a full suite of AI services to customers.”
Jefferies says it sees Darden’s “value appeal” restored.
“We have become increasingly positive on DRI’s ability to return its core Olive Garden brand to ‘Every Day Affordable Price’ (EDAP) leadership in casual dining and compete more effectively for traffic going forward.”
Wells says it sees robust free cash flow for the cloud security company.
“We believe Zscaler is well positioned to deliver $5B in ARR over the next ~2.5 years with a 25% OM [operating margin] and 29% FCF margin.”
Raymond James says the nuclear energy company is well positioned for growth.
“Constellation Energy (CEG), the largest independent power producer, stands out as the nation’s
largest producer of clean energy, the largest nuclear fleet operator, and the largest commercialindustrial retail book holder, cementing an entrenched market leadership story.”
BMO says it has “more confident in software and operating income.”
“Consistent with our preview, we have growing confidence that 1) Oracle can grow operating income dollars in FY26, and 2) P/E is a more appropriate valuation framework during accelerated cap ex spend periods.”
Mizuho says the company is the leader in the AI race. CUDA is Nvidia’s computing platform and programming model.
“We continue to see NVDA leading the AI race with its fortress CUDA moat and strong hardware/networking performance for AI training and inference.”
The investment bank says its Apple checks show iPhone and iPad estimates are tracking ahead. The firm also said the iPhone and iPad sell-thru in China are “positively surprising.”
“Furthermore, despite trending below normal seasonality, preliminary September qtr iPhone/iPad builds point to in-line to slightly better than expected September qtr iPhone/iPad shipments.”
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