Reuters.com photo |
According to a story by Liana Baker at reuters.com, during its second day of trade, doubts mounted about whether the online radio company would ever turn a profit and compete with its Internet rivals, causing investors to bail out of the stock from the earliest hours of the session.
Shares closed at $13.26, down $4.16 or 24 percent, on the New York Stock Exchange. This is below the $16 per share IPO price, meaning investors who bought the stock as it went public have lost money.
Analysts advised investors to avoid buying the stock because shares are too pricey and do not reflect how the company will do competing against its rivals.
BTIG analyst Richard Greenfield put a sell rating on the stock and a $5.50 price target on it.
"Its business model does not scale in the same way as other successful Internet businesses," Greenfield said.
The research note also raised questions about the company being able to sustain itself on advertising and how its content costs for its music are eating into its profit.
The bigger Pandora's audience gets, the more it must pay record labels in licensing fees, hurting the mostly free radio service's chances of becoming profitable.
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