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Roku's topsy-turvy week

This week streaming player Roku must have felt like it was swimming against the tide.

Early in the week, Roku's stock took a hit when media giant Comcast and social media kingpin Facebook announced threats to Roku's turf. The stock rebounded when the company announced a new product line mid-week, but Friday took a major wallop when Pivotal Research Group initiated coverage of the company -- but with a "sell" rating sending the stock down to a near 20 percent drop. However, good news came after the bell with some came newfound support from a major financial player.

“We see dramatically more competition that will likely drive the cost of OTT devices to zero,” Pivotal analyst Jeffrey Wlodarczak wrote in a note sent to investors on Friday morning.

While the stock for the "over the top" device provider is up more than 252 percent for the year, this week is indicative of just how volatile the streaming landscape is for Roku -- and other players.

Wlodarczak cited a variety of recent market developments, such as Comcast’s announcement of a free alternative, the Xfinity Flex streaming box, which they will give to their internet-only subscribers, that, he feels, “is likely to be copied by other distributors.”

This will put pressure on hardware and subscription revenues, but it does improve prospects for subscription video-on-demand services offered through them, as well as advertising and "other" revenues that can be generated via free, ubiquitous distribution.

“Unfortunately for Roku, their already high advertising splits (50/50) with OTT players also potentially sets them up to be undercut by competitors and distributor’s already massive content spend gives them enormous leverage," the report contends.

This all leads Wlodarczak to question how Roku can compete with the “big boys” led by Comcast, which Pivotal rates a “buy,” and that this will make Roku’s “growth much more difficult.”

"In our view Roku stock still looks dramatically overvalued despite the recent pullback and we are initiating with a 'sell' and a $60 target price,” the report concluded.

The report did provide a bright spot for Roku, saying its “management deserves a lot of credit for what they have created and Roku is one of the few OTT investment pure-plays.”

When asked for comment, a Roku spokeswoman told FOX Business, “We don’t comment on the views of one analyst,” and attempts to reach Wlodarczak for additional comment were unsuccessful.

After the closing bell, Oppenheimer Funds countered with an announcement that they are maintaining their “Outperform” rating and raising their price target to $155 from $120 “after evaluating the impact of Roku's international expansion plans and the slew of new OTT streaming services coming to market in 4Q and in 2020.”