Home » Analysis

Akamai Technologies falls out of favour

September 11, 2008 4:41 pm

No Comment

Akamai Technologies Inc. (AKAM)

While Flight of the Choncords may be my current favourite purveyors of mirth, I do get a good laugh when I read “analysis” like this by Steve Biggs from Zacks.

Akamai is currently trading at its 52-week low price. The company’s P/E ratio of 15.2x is based on our 2008 EPS estimate of $1.29 and 4.2x our 2008 revenue estimate of $4.69 per share. Although the valuation has fallen to the low-end of historic levels, we would not be the buyers of the stock given the risk of a decelerating growth rate. Revenue grew at 51.4% in 2006, slowing to 48.5% in 2007.

Akamai’s 2008 guidance indicates revenue growth of 24.5%, well below historical levels. We therefore lower our six-month price target to $20.00. This represents a P/E multiple of 13.2x and a P/S multiple of 3.5x our 2009 estimates.


With Akamai trading around $19-20 earlier this week when that analysis is published my impression is the author suffered from a nasty bout of anchoring and rather than working out a value for Akamai he simply worked out what multiples the current price and estimates indicated.

At current prices Akamai is certainly worth a closer look. I own Akamai and will be taking that closer look.

I won’t even mention the ludicrous notion of a six month price target, oh I just did.

Share and Enjoy:
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google
  • MisterWong
  • NewsVine
More on this topic (What's this?)
Akamai’s Pricing Conundrum
Thinking about Akamai’s Q3 Report
Deja vu, Akamai style
Read more on Akamai Technologies at Wikinvest

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.