Citi has downgraded Netflix.
In a note to clients on Thursday, analysts at Citi cut their rating on shares of Netflix to "Neutral" from "Buy," noting that the stock is now only 6% below its $722 price target and seems unlikely to hit its "upside" case of $950 per share.
Citi first upgraded the stock to a "Buy" in April, and in just those 2 months the stock has risen 50%.
Over the last year, Netflix shares have almost doubled, and so in other words, there's no reason to get greedy here.
Here's Citi:
We are downgrading NFLX to Neutral from Buy for 4 main reasons:
- Shares are up 99% YTD, 43% since the 1Q15 report, 49% since our 4/10/15 upgrade, and now trade only 6% below our $722 target;
- While we've presented an upside case of more than $950/share, we believe investors are unlikely to ascribe this full value until there are more signs of traction in recently launched markets, which may not be imminent;
- In each of the past three years, NFLX shares have consistently sold off meaningfully following the 2Q and 3Q earnings reports;
- The ratio of sell-side Buy ratings has only been this high once before (and that was nine years ago).
To be clear, this is not a call on NFLX’s 2Q results or 3Q guidance (which we believe are not at risk), and we remain positive on the long-term growth outlook for Netflix.
So, this is a downgrade, but not really.
The point here is that Citi is telling clients they don't need to go out and buy shares of Netflix right now, but they don't need to worry: Netflix is still awesome.
In other Netflix news, the company announced on Tuesday that it would split its stock 7 ways, which will change the price of the stock, but not the value.
And on Wednesday, hedge fund giant Carl Icahn said he was going to take his almost $2 billion profit in Netflix and go home.
SEE ALSO: Netflix is splitting its stock 7 ways
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