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Allbirds, Inc. (NASDAQ:BIRD) shareholders are probably feeling a little disappointed, since its shares fell 6.8% to US$0.57 in the week after its latest first-quarter results. It was a respectable set of results; while revenues of US$39m were in line with analyst predictions, statutory losses were 16% smaller than expected, with Allbirds losing US$0.18 per share. The analysts typically update their forecasts at each earnings report, and we can judge from their estimates whether their view of the company has changed or if there are any new concerns to be aware of. Readers will be glad to know we've aggregated the latest statutory forecasts to see whether the analysts have changed their mind on Allbirds after the latest results.
See our latest analysis for Allbirds
Following the recent earnings report, the consensus from five analysts covering Allbirds is for revenues of US$198.6m in 2024. This implies an uncomfortable 17% decline in revenue compared to the last 12 months. The loss per share is expected to greatly reduce in the near future, narrowing 31% to US$0.64. Yet prior to the latest earnings, the analysts had been forecasting revenues of US$198.1m and losses of US$0.69 per share in 2024. So there seems to have been a moderate uplift in analyst sentiment with the latest consensus release, given the upgrade to loss per share forecasts for this year.
Even with the lower forecast losses, the analysts lowered their valuations, with the average price target falling 26% to US$0.85. It looks likethe analysts have become less optimistic about the overall business. Fixating on a single price target can be unwise though, since the consensus target is effectively the average of analyst price targets. As a result, some investors like to look at the range of estimates to see if there are any diverging opinions on the company's valuation. Currently, the most bullish analyst values Allbirds at US$1.00 per share, while the most bearish prices it at US$0.70. As you can see, analysts are not all in agreement on the stock's future, but the range of estimates is still reasonably narrow, which could suggest that the outcome is not totally unpredictable.
Of course, another way to look at these forecasts is to place them into context against the industry itself. We would highlight that revenue is expected to reverse, with a forecast 22% annualised decline to the end of 2024. That is a notable change from historical growth of 1.5% over the last three years. By contrast, our data suggests that other companies (with analyst coverage) in the same industry are forecast to see their revenue grow 6.0% annually for the foreseeable future. So although its revenues are forecast to shrink, this cloud does not come with a silver lining - Allbirds is expected to lag the wider industry.