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Wall Street analysts start bullish on Omada Health on chronic care market growth

Wall Street analysts start bullish on Omada Health on chronic care market growth

Yahoo9 hours ago
Investing.com -- Barclays, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley issued bullish rating on Omada Health stock saying the virtual‑care provider could capture more of the large market for diabetes, hypertension and weight‑management services.
Barclays began at 'overweight' with a $21 price target, arguing Omada's new GLP‑1 weight‑loss programme should speed adoption of its digital coaching platform.
Goldman Sachs started at 'buy' and set the Street‑high target of $29, saying a focus on measured clinical outcomes can help the company outgrow peers.
JP Morgan initiated at 'overweight' with a $19 target and projected roughly 24% compound annual revenue growth through 2027 as Omada expands its corporate client base.
Morgan Stanley also rated the stock 'overweight' and set a $25 target, citing scope for margin gains as artificial‑intelligence tools automate parts of the service.
The brokerages see Omada tapping a U.S. population in which more than 150 million people live with at least one chronic condition. Several analysts said last year's introduction of an integrated care track for users of GLP‑1 weight‑loss drugs, and recent partnerships with pharmacy‑benefit giants CVS Caremark and Express Scripts, should widen the company's reach.
San Francisco‑based Omada raised $158 million in its Nasdaq debut on June 6, pricing shares at $19. The stock has since traded below that level but is up roughly 20% from its low.
Analysts said Omada's move toward break‑even, targeted for the second half of 2026 or 2027 depending on the forecast, gives management flexibility to invest in new products while trimming debt. The company was valued at about $1.4 billion, or just under three times projected 2026 revenue, a discount to digital‑health peers, the broker notes said.
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Exclusive-Intel's new CEO explores big shift in chip manufacturing business
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So far, he has updated his leadership team, bringing in new engineering talent, and he has worked to shrink what he considered bloated and slow-moving middle management. Shifting away from selling 18A to foundry customers would represent one of his biggest moves yet. The 18A manufacturing process includes a novel method of delivering energy to chips and a new type of transistor. Together, these enhancements were meant to let Intel match or exceed TSMC's capabilities, Intel executives have previously said. However, according to some industry analysts, the 18A process is roughly equivalent to TSMC's so-called N3 manufacturing technology, which went into high-volume production in late 2022. If Intel follows Tan's lead, the company would focus its foundry employees, design partners and new customers on 14A, where it hopes for a better chance to compete against TSMC. Tan has drawn on extensive contacts and customer relationships built over decades in the chip industry to arrive at his view on 18A, the two sources said. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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