Price target revisions reflect shifting sell-side models; they lag news and vary by firm, so read them as opinions.
What the data shows
As of May 29, 2026, the past seven days saw significant activity in the IT sector. CRM experienced eight distinct downward revisions, despite one upgrade from B. Riley Securities (205 to 240). Other notable upgrades included D, where Jefferies raised its target from 65 to 76 (16.9% increase), and NVDA, where Tigress Financial adjusted its target from 360 to 425.
| Ticker | Firm | Direction | Prior → Current | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| D | Jefferies | Up | 65 → 76 | 05-28 |
| CRM | B. Riley | Up | 205 → 240 | 05-28 |
| CRM | Citi | Down | 188 → 173 | 05-28 |
| NVDA | Tigress | Up | 360 → 425 | 05-27 |
How to read these figures
A single firm's revision does not shift the consensus mean immediately. These figures are forward-looking opinions, not trading signals. Review the full list of moves to see how dispersed analyst views are for a specific ticker.
IT sector in context
The IT sector saw heavy re-evaluation, particularly with CRM. When multiple firms lower targets simultaneously, it often indicates a shared reaction to recent earnings or sector-wide headwinds, rather than a single firm's outlier opinion.
Key takeaways
* Revisions represent individual analyst model updates, not market consensus. * IT sector targets saw high volatility this week compared to other sectors. * Use these figures to track how professional expectations evolve over time.
Frequently asked questions
What counts as an upgrade?
An upgrade occurs when an analyst increases their price target, signaling a change in their valuation model for that security.
Is a raise automatically bullish?
Not necessarily; a target raise may simply reflect a change in valuation methodology or updated financial data rather than a new outlook.