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Analyst Upgrades: 3 Stocks Have Wall Street Feeling Warm & Fuzzy

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Analyst stock upgrades are something many retail investors follow religiously to gain an edge in their investment selection.

While I don’t have any empirical data to demonstrate whether analysts are good or bad at picking stocks, I think they tend to offer up buy ratings much more than sell calls. Long-time market follower Mark Hulbert recently reported that only 5.6% of analyst ratings for S&P 500 companies fall into the sell category, suggesting that if you own a stock that gets an outright sell, you might take it more seriously than a buy recommendation.

“Don’t assume that the lopsided plurality of ‘buys’ over ‘sells’ is bullish,” Hulbert recently wrote in MarketWatch. 

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Interestingly, Hulbert writes, the National Association of Securities Dealers adopted a rule in 2002 that required stock brokers to reveal their buy, hold, and sell recommendations to the public. It was a way of shaming them into making more sell calls. It didn’t work.

According to Hulbert, upgraded stocks have failed to outperform the index since the rule came into effect. Before the rule, they beat it.

Don’t say you weren’t warned.

Here are three analyst stock upgrades to consider. 

Azul (AZUL)

image of a plane flying in the sky representing airline stocks
image of a plane flying in the sky representing airline stocks

Source: Shutterstock

Azul (NYSE:AZUL) is a Brazilian-based airline founded by former JetBlue (NASDAQ:JBLU) founder David Neeleman in 2008. The airline has a $1 billion market capitalization. Its shares are up more than 68% in 2023. 

On Sept. 20, Goldman Sachs upgraded the airline’s stock to buy from neutral. Analyst Bruno Amorim also upped his price target by $3.40 to $18.30. Up 14% on the news, the analyst’s target is nearly double its share price. 

Two days before the Goldman upgrade, JPMorgan upgraded Azul stock to Overweight. Of the other 11 analysts that cover the airline’s stock, five rate it a buy, while six have it at Hold.  

Azul held its 2023 Investor Day recently. The company emphasized the strength of its travel network, which flies to 155 domestic destinations in Brazil, 3x its competition, while also providing seven international destinations including Miami, Orlando, Lisbon, and Paris. 

With its shares trading below its 2017 initial public offering at $21 a share, aggressive investors are wise to take a closer look.

Lululemon (LULU)

the lululemon (LULU) logo on a mosaic-style wall
the lululemon (LULU) logo on a mosaic-style wall

Source: Richard Frazier / Shutterstock.com

Several analysts have upgraded Lululemon (NASDAQ:LULU) in September. 

On Sept. 5, Alliance Bernstein analysts upgraded the leisure apparel company’s stock to ‘market perform’ from ‘underperform’. While the move isn’t a buy rating, it’s the direction that counts. Alliance Bernstein argued that because Lululemon’s sales growth has normalized, it is easier to be more optimistic about its long-term growth story.