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JPMorgan downgraded Nutanix (NTNX) from Overweight to Neutral with a $44 price target, citing the slowing cloud infrastructure rally and intensifying competition from VMware and Broadcom, which limits portfolio stock expansion.
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The downgrade reflects a broader rotation from enterprise software to hardware and semiconductor peers with direct exposure to AI revenues, indicating that Nutanix’s solid earnings fundamentals may not be enough to realize near-term gains from current valuations.
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Nutanix (NASDAQ:NTNX) shares got the cold shoulder from JPMorgan on Friday, as the company downgraded its rating from Overweight to Neutral and set a price target of $44. The downgrade comes as Nutanix shares have already lost significant ground, signaling Wall Street is reassessing whether the rally in cloud infrastructure has run its course for players in the software layer.
For long-term investors, the call is a signal worth taking seriously. The stock is trading at $36 and moving, and while JPMorgan’s target is above the current price, the move from Overweight to Neutral indicates that the company sees only limited near-term upside potential as of now.
|
Ticker |
Company |
Sturdy |
Action |
Old review |
New review |
Old Goal |
New goal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
NTNX |
Nutanix |
JPMorgan |
Downgrade |
Overweight |
Neutral |
N/A |
$44 |
JPMorgan’s move reflects growing concerns that the cloud infrastructure rally has priced in most of the short-term upside for software platforms like Nutanix. Competitive pressure from VMware, now part of Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) and other hybrid cloud vendors are intensifying, hampering Nutanix’s ability to expand portfolio share. The broader enterprise software environment is also facing valuation headwinds as investors focus on hardware and semiconductor names with more direct exposure to AI revenues.
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The timing is remarkable. Nutanix’s most recent quarter showed earnings per share of $0.56, versus an estimate of $0.44, a gain of 27%. Still, the stock’s 29% decline this year reflects a market that has discounted its valuation long before JPMorgan made it official. The stock’s price-to-earnings ratio of 40x remains high relative to its growth rate, even as the forward multiple contracts.
Nutanix is developing a hyper-converged infrastructure and hybrid multi-cloud platform sold primarily through a subscription model. Annual recurring revenue was $1.97 billion, up 18% year over year, and the company has a market capitalization of nearly $9.8 billion. That said, negative equity of -$685 million and an accumulated deficit of $4.83 billion remain structural concerns for risk-conscious investors.
The contrast with hardware peers is great. Dell’s AI-optimized server revenue was $8.95 billion in the most recent quarter, up 342% year-over-year, and Broadcom posted AI semiconductor revenue of $8.4 billion, up 106% year-over-year.
Meanwhile, Nutanix shares are down 44% over the past twelve months, underperforming the hardware infrastructure names that are absorbing the bulk of AI spending.
JPMorgan’s downgrade by analysts doesn’t mean Nutanix’s business is broken. The fundamentals, including consistent earnings performance and rising ARR, remain solid. Still, the Neutral rating indicates that the easy money under this name may already be behind us, and the broader Street analyst consensus target of $55.87 suggests JPMorgan is now the most cautious voice in the room.
If you’re a long-term investor looking for a re-entry point, watch for the valuation to drop further toward the 52-week low of $35.39 before adding exposure. The cloud infrastructure story is not over yet, but patience may be rewarded here more than urgency.
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