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Duolingo AI memo will weigh on Q2 results
It’s bearish, but relax (CSA Images/Getty Images)

Backlash to Duolingo’s AI memo will hit Q2 numbers: Morgan Stanley

Live by social media buzz, die by social media backlash.

In the last hour of trading, Duolingo was on its way to a 3% loss for the day, after Morgan Stanley analysts trimmed Q2 estimates for the online language-learning app, which until recently had showed remarkable agility by building its brand through its slightly unhinged social media content.

Then came the company’s decision to publish on LinkedIn a memo outlining its plan to becoming an “AI-first” company.

It was the kind of corporate thought leadership that pervades the executive-friendly networking platform. But readers and users clearly took exception to one section of the memo, where CEO Luis von Ahn said the transition would mean the company will gradually stop using contractors for work that AI could do. It didn’t go well, according to Business Insider:

“The backlash was harsh. Tweets, TikToks, and Reddit posts exploded in outrage. Duolingo has cultivated a big social presence with its meme-loving owl mascot, so the company was a prime target. One TikTok creator implored their fans not to allow Duolingo to return from being canceled.”

There also seemed to be a business impact. Analysts at Jefferies recently suggested that a decline in the growth rate of daily active users (DAUs) may have been linked to the kerfuffle. On Tuesday, Morgan Stanley analysts concurred, noting other evidence since the ill-fated LinkedIn post:

“Since then, we have seen a decline in US users albeit with no impact internationally. This can be shown through a variety of datapoints, Sensor Tower shows US DAUs declined ~5% in the following 2 weeks & another ~5% since, international DAUs have been unaffected ( Exhibit 1 ). Second, the number of people learning a language in English on DUOL has declined ~1% while people learning English has increased ~3% ( Exhibit 2 ). Third, the average views on DUOL’s TikTok videos in June were down ~55% versus April showing reduced virality ( Exhibit 3 ). With the US user weakness occurring after the company gave guidance, we expect DUOL’s DAUs will come in below prior expectations and now model 40% y/y DAU growth, the low-end of guidance.”

Morgan Stanley cut their price target for the stock to $480 from $515, which still implies a roughly 25% upside over the next 12 to 18 months. And the bank’s analysts think that, like most social media phenomena, anti-Duolingo sentiment will prove ephemeral.

“User backlash to tech companies has historically been shortlived. We see some evidence this is following a similar path: US 1-star reviews normalized in June to <5% of the total after spiking in May ( Exhibit 4 ), US DAUs have stabilized since mid-June, and the company has seen views trend upwards on recent TikToks.”

Morgan Stanley maintained its “overweight” (essentially “buy”) rating on the stock, saying “nothing fundamentally alters our bullish thesis.”

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Luke Kawa

Microsoft is in talks to shift its custom chip business to Broadcom from Marvell, The Information reports

The Information’s profile of custom chip specialist Broadcom includes this tidbit:

“And now Microsoft is also in talks to design future chips with Broadcom, which would involve Microsoft switching its business from Marvell, another maker of custom chips, according to one person involved in the discussions.”

Shares of Marvell Technology briefly dipped into the red after this report hit the wires, but then pared that drop to trade modestly higher. The company codesigns the Maia line of ASICs for Microsoft that are custom-built for Azure. Microsoft is its second-biggest hyperscaler client, behind Amazon.

Marvell tumbled on a ho-hum earnings report earlier this week before going on to surge after CEO Matt Murphy offered a $10 billion revenue target for its upcoming fiscal year, which was above analysts’ expectations.

Perhaps this is a bit of Information fatigue, given how Microsoft was quick to deny a report from the outlet earlier this week about how the tech giant lowered its sales targets for AI products.

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Luke Kawa

Memory stocks soar as AI supporting cast repairs damage from steep November declines

There’s not much rhyme or reason to it, but memory stocks are ending the week with a stellar showing.

Shares of high-bandwidth memory specialist Micron, hard disk drive sellers Seagate Technology Holdings and Western Digital, and flash memory company Sandisk are all rising today.

Three of these stocks dropped about 20% in November as credit risk seeping into AI and a downturn in speculative momentum stocks weighed on the theme, with Sandisk faring the worst.

Micron, Western Digital, and Seagate have all since rebounded strongly and are about 5% or less from reclaiming all-time highs, while Sandisk has made up the least ground.

While GPUs (and, more recently, TPUs) get most of the headlines, data centers also need a boatload of memory chips that store information and feed it to those processors.

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Ulta soars as Q3 beat sparks flood of price target hikes

Ulta’s latest makeover is happening on Wall Street. Shares leapt Friday morning as analysts hiked their price targets after the beauty retailer topped Q3 estimates and raised its full-year outlook after the bell Thursday.

Earnings came in at $5.14 per share, handily beating analyst expectations of $4.64. Revenue also topped estimates at $2.86 billion, compared with the $2.72 billion expected. Ulta has benefited from resilient beauty spending, even as consumers pull back elsewhere and hunt more aggressively for discounts.

Ulta now expects full-year net sales of about $12.3 billion, up from a prior forecast of $12.0 billion to $12.1 billion. The retailer also lifted its earnings outlook to $25.20 to $25.50 per share, up from $23.85 to $24.30 previously. This marks Ulta’s second straight quarter of hiking its sales and profit forecast. Analysts are taking note:

  • Goldman Sachs maintained its “buy” rating and raised its price target to $642 from $584.

  • DA Davidson maintained its “buy” rating and raised its price target to $650 from $625.

  • JPMorgan maintained its “outperform” rating and raised its price target to $647 from $606.

  • Baird maintained its “outperform” rating and hiked its price target to $670 from $600.

  • Telsey Advisory maintained its “outperform” rating and raised its price target to $640 from $610.

  • Piper Sandler maintained its “outperform” rating and raised its price target to $615 from $590.

  • Canaccord Genuity maintained its “neutral” rating and raised its price target to $674 from $654.

markets

Southwest cuts its earnings outlook on lost revenue due to government shutdown

Another big four airline has put a price tag on the 43-day government shutdown.

Southwest Airlines on Friday said lower revenue due to a temporary decline in demand during the shutdown, together with higher fuel costs, will ding its annual earnings before interest and taxes by between $100 million and $300 million. The carrier lowered its full-year EBIT outlook to $500 million, down from a prior range of $600 million to $800 million.

According to Southwest’s filing, bookings have returned to previous expectations following the end of the shutdown. Its shares dipped down about 1% in premarket trading.

The carrier joins Delta Air Lines in assigning a cost to the government closure. Earlier this week, Delta said the shutdown would cost it $200 million in the fourth quarter.

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