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Investing.com — Here is your Pro Recap of the biggest analyst cuts you may have missed since yesterday: downgrades for Alphabet, Albemarle , Corning, TransUnion , Affirm Holdings , and Farfetch.
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Alphabet downgraded, numbers slashed on disappointing Q3
After Alphabet's (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Q3 earnings release late Tuesday, the Google operator was taking a beating and lost its Buy rating at Monness, Crespi, Hardt and a number of Wall Street analysts trimmed their price targets on the stock.
GOOGL shares were recently tumbling more than 9%.
The search giant beat on top and bottom lines, but cloud revenue rose less than expected - it came to $8.4 billion, a 22% climb, vs. expectations for $8.6B - and operating income was also short of expectations at $21.34B. Overall earnings came to $1.55 per share, ahead of the $1.46 average target, and total revenue of $76.7B beat the $75.9B estimate.
Monness, Crespi, Hardt analysts called the operating profit result "disappointing" and characterized its earnings call as "opaque." They said they believe the company is well positioned across a number of dimensions, including AI innovations and its "leaner cost structure," but that "regulatory headwinds persist, competition is dynamic, and we believe the darkest days of this downturn are ahead of us."
Elsewhere, Citi highlighted the poor operating income result as well. Bernstein acknowledged the solid top line, but wrote, "margin contraction and a soft cloud print weighs heavily on the question 'why buy Google here?'
Bernstein trimmed the price target by $5 to $135 while keeping its Market Perform rating on the stock, and Stifel cut its own price target by $9 to $145 - although kept its Buy rating on GOOGL.
GOOGL shares were recently changing hands at $126.18.
Albemarle cut at {{0||Piper Sandler}} on macro worries
Chemical maker Albemarle (NYSE:ALB), the world's largest lithium producer, was losing ground after Piper Sandler cut its rating to Neutral from Overweight and dramatically cut its price target - to $155 from the prior $255 - , as reported in real-time on InvestingPro.
The downgrade is based on macro concerns: the overall long-term outlook for the industry and "challenges in [electric vehicle] manufacturing and demand, which may conspire to significantly degrade lithium’s S/D dynamics," wrote the analysts.
They added:
"We believe widespread downstream issues for the product owing to slowing EV demand growth driven by macroeconomic factors and product issues within the OEMs and a relatively faster rate of lithium supply growth will take the lithium market to a balanced to long situation vs. estimates of a decidedly short situation as recently as 6 months ago. As a result, lithium prices may remain under pressure and earnings growth may suffer."