SoundHound AI Stock Sinks 8% as Revenue Misses Wall Street's Estimate. Is SOUN Stock a Buy?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • First-quarter revenue increased 151% year over year, missing the 162% Wall Street expectation.

  • Adjusted loss per share was $0.06, on target with the analyst consensus estimate.

  • Management reaffirmed its previously issued full-year 2025 revenue guidance of $157 million to $177 million and expects to achieve positive adjusted EBITDA by the end of the year.

  • 10 stocks we like better than SoundHound AI ›

SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) stock declined 7.8% on Friday following the conversational artificial intelligence (AI) technology provider's release of its first-quarter 2025 report on the prior afternoon. The drop is largely attributable to the quarter's revenue falling short of Wall Street's expectations. The bottom-line result was in line with the analyst consensus estimate.

Interior of a vehicle showing icons related to SoundHound AI's Chat AI for Automotive product.
Image source: SoundHound AI.

SoundHound AI's key numbers

Metric

Q1 2024

Q1 2025

Change

Revenue

$11.6 million

$29.1 million

151%

GAAP operating income

($28.5 million)

$128.1 million

Flipped from negative to positive

GAAP net income

($33 million)

$129.9 million

Flipped from negative to positive

Adjusted net income

($20.2 million)

($22.3 million)

Loss widened by 10%

GAAP earnings per share (EPS)

($0.12)

$0.31

Flipped from negative to positive

Adjusted EPS

($0.07)

($0.06)

Loss narrowed by 14%

Investors should focus on the adjusted numbers, which exclude one-time items. Q1 2025 GAAP numbers include an accounting-only (noncash) gain related to acquisitions. Data source: SoundHound AI. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles.

Acquisitions over the last year have helped revenue growth year over year, though we do not know to what degree. In other words, we don't know the organic revenue growth rate. On the positive side, these acquisitions have enabled the company to better diversify its customer base on both individual and industry bases. No single customer accounted for more than 10% of revenue in the quarter.

Investors should focus on the adjusted numbers, which exclude one-time items. Wall Street was looking for an adjusted loss of $0.06 per share on revenue of $30.4 million, so SoundHound met the bottom-line expectation but missed the top-line one.

SoundHound used $19.2 million in cash to run its operation, slightly better than its operating cash flow of negative $21.9 million in the year-ago period. Free cash flow was negative $19.3 million, compared with negative $25.7 million in the year-ago period. The company ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $246 million and no long-term debt. At the current cash burn rate, SoundHound's cash will last about 12.7 quarters, or just over three years.