Can Lyft Stock Keep Bucking the Market Selloff?

In This Article:

An interesting and peculiar beacon of strength amid the recent  turmoil of the financial markets has been Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT) stock. In early May, U.S. President Donald Trump fired off a tweet threatening to raise tariffs on China. The first week after that tweet was rough for stocks, and pretty much every stock dropped during that stretch. But, ever since that first week, there’s been a clear divergence between winners and losers, and the S&P 500 has essentially traded flat.

Lyft Stock
Lyft Stock

Source: Shutterstock

One notable winner has been Lyft stock. Since May 13, Lyft stock price has risen nearly 20%, while many of its growth-stock peers have struggled during that same time frame, with Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG) all dropping.

Those who are bearish on Lyft stock may counter that Lyft is just getting a dead-cat bounce before its next major selloff, and that Lyft stock price won’t continue to rise. Bulls, conversely, could argue that Lyft stock price has finally bottomed, and is now ready to regain its IPO levels.

InvestorPlace - Stock Market News, Stock Advice & Trading Tips

Which argument will turn out to be true?

I think the bullish take will prevail.  Lyft is well-positioned to grow rapidly over the next several years.  Concerns about its profitability  are overstated, as are worries about its competition. Meanwhile, its profits could eventually be quite large, and its likely future profits justify a much higher price tag than $60 for Lyft stock today.

All in all, then, it looks like Lyft stock price is poised to rise much higher soon. In other words, the rally of Lyft stock will persist for the foreseeable future.

The Resilience of Lyft Stock  Makes Sense

The resilience and relative outperformance of Lyft stock amid escalating trade tensions between the U.S. and China makes sense.

Lyft has essentially zero exposure to China at this point. The company indeed has very little international exposure, as most of its revenues are derived from its U.S. ride-sharing business. Thus, the trade war is only relevant to Lyft to the extent that it affects the U.S. economy, and the outlook of the American economy remains favorable today.

Further, Lyft stock had been really beaten up heading into mid-May. Lyft stock price at one point reached as low as $47, a 35% plunge from its $72 IPO price. The stock was due for a bounce, and as the market tumbled on concerns that were largely unrelated to Lyft, the timing was right for a bounce by Lyft stock.