Semiconductor optimism drives bullish calls on AMD and Monolithic Power while managed care stocks come under pressure
Wall Street analysts issued a wave of influential research calls Monday, shifting sentiment across sectors from technology to healthcare and industrials. According to The Fly, today’s market-moving analyst actions reveal growing enthusiasm for semiconductors and digital platforms but rising caution for cyclical and managed care industries.
Top Upgrades Boost Growth and Tech Names
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) received one of the day’s most impactful upgrades. Wolfe Research raised AMD to Outperform from Peer Perform and lifted its price target to $300, citing strong momentum from the company’s deepening partnership with OpenAI. The firm now sees $10+ earnings per share power, a bullish call fueled by AI chip demand and AMD’s expanding data center footprint.
DoorDash (DASH) also surged after JPMorgan upgraded the stock to Overweight and doubled its price target to $325 from $175. The firm pointed to “industry-leading growth” and improving unit economics as DoorDash expands into new categories beyond food delivery.
In the semiconductor sector, Monolithic Power Systems (MPWR) joined AMD in the spotlight. Wolfe Research upgraded the stock to Outperform with a $1,200 price target, calling its revenue model and earnings trajectory “conservative but impressive,” with potential to hit $24+ EPS by 2027.
Telecom giant T-Mobile (TMUS) received an upgrade from RBC Capital, which moved the stock to Outperform with a $270 price target, citing valuation strength and reliable operating trends. Meanwhile, HP Inc. (HPQ) climbed after HSBC raised its rating to Buy, pointing to stability in PC and printer sales returning after industry softness.
Downgrades Reflect Valuation Risks and Slowing Growth
Not all analyst sentiment was optimistic. Micron Technology (MU) was downgraded by New Street Research to Neutral, even as AI-driven memory demand soars. Analysts warned that the stock trades at “peak multiples,” meaning earnings may no longer justify its valuation.
Salesforce (CRM) was cut to Market Perform by Northland, which slashed its price target to $264 amid stagnant growth in remaining performance obligations—an important indicator of future sales. CyberArk (CYBR) was downgraded by Barclays following news of its acquisition by Palo Alto Networks.
The commodities and industrials space was weaker as well. BofA downgraded Nutrien (NTR), citing fading fertilizer prices, while Carrier Global (CARR) was cut by Oppenheimer due to near-term earnings pressures.
New Coverage Highlights Digital Finance and Managed Care Risks
In initiations, Stephens resumed coverage on FedEx (FDX) with an Overweight rating, while RBC launched coverage on AppLovin (APP) with a striking $700 price target, emphasizing the company’s growing role in AI-driven digital advertising.
In the fintech space, William Blair initiated Circle Internet (CRCL) at Outperform, predicting USD Coin will play a leading role in transforming cross-border business payments.
Healthcare saw mixed signals. Goldman Sachs began coverage on CVS, Cigna, and UnitedHealth with Buy ratings, projecting margin recovery in Medicare Advantage starting 2026. However, the firm also issued Sell ratings on Centene and Humana, warning of the worst underwriting downturn in 15 years for managed care providers.
Overall, today’s analyst actions show renewed conviction in AI, semiconductors, and digital platforms, while valuation worries and macro pressures weigh on traditional sectors. Investors seeking direction amid earnings season may find these calls a roadmap for shifting institutional sentiment.
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