Price target revisions reflect shifting sell-side models. These figures lag news and vary by firm, so interpret them as opinions.
What the data shows
As of May 26, 2026, the past seven days saw significant activity. Upgrades included NEE (Barclays, 89→90) and UNH (UBS, 410→460). Notable downgrades featured WMT (UBS, 147→141; RBC, 140→137; BNP, 147→146) and DE (DA Davidson, 775→685; BofA, 672→607.5).
| Ticker | Firm | Direction | Prior → Current | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NEE | Barclays | Up | 89 → 90 | 05-26 |
| WMT | UBS | Down | 147 → 141 | 05-22 |
| DE | BofA | Down | 672 → 607.5 | 05-22 |
| UNH | UBS | Up | 410 → 460 | 05-22 |
How to read these figures
A single firm’s revision does not shift the consensus mean instantly. Analysts use proprietary models; a change indicates their specific view on earnings or valuation multiples, not a market-wide consensus shift. Review the full moves log for historical context.
Key takeaways
* Revisions represent individual analyst outlooks, not aggregate market sentiment. * Multiple downgrades on a single ticker, like WMT, suggest a shared concern among those specific firms. * Upside percentages are snapshots based on current market prices and forward targets.
Frequently asked questions
What counts as an upgrade?
An upgrade occurs when an analyst increases their price target, signaling a more optimistic valuation for the stock.
Is a raise automatically bullish?
Not necessarily, as a target increase might simply adjust for recent price gains or changing accounting metrics rather than a change in fundamental outlook.