Zillow’s shares experienced a turbulent week before staging an unexpected Friday recovery.
Following a dip to a 52-week bottom of $41.91 early in the week, Zillow (Z) rallied approximately 6% Friday after receiving supportive commentary from JPMorgan. The investment firm challenged the pessimistic outlook that has weighed on shares.
Zillow Group, Inc. Class C, Z
The real estate platform has shed roughly 38% of its value over the trailing twelve months. In just the last half-year, shares have plunged almost 49%. At its nadir, the stock was changing hands 55% under its 52-week peak of $93.88.
Despite the substantial markdown, the company maintains a market capitalization approaching $10 billion.
JPMorgan contended that prevailing worries surrounding artificial intelligence threats, pending litigation, regulatory headwinds, and modifications to listing protocols are being magnified beyond reason by market participants. The firm believes investors are failing to properly value Zillow’s fundamental business operations and long-range strategic positioning.
The financial institution also highlighted Zillow’s forthcoming AI summit scheduled for March 24 as a possible inflection point. JPMorgan suggested the gathering could showcase how Zillow’s proprietary data assets, integrated operations, and end-to-end platform provide the firm with sustainable competitive advantages.
Technical indicators continue flashing a “sell” signal for the equity, which remains down approximately 40% year-to-date. Daily trading volume averages roughly 4.3 million shares.
Zillow delivered Q4 2025 financial results that presented a split outcome. The company posted revenue of $654 million, exceeding analyst projections of $650.23 million. However, earnings per share registered at $0.39, falling marginally short of the $0.40 consensus estimate.
On the analyst coverage side, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods lowered its price objective from $65 to $60 while maintaining its Market Perform designation. The research group observed that Zillow’s 2026 outlook aligned largely with Street expectations, though profitability headwinds stemming from litigation expenses were identified as a risk factor.
William Blair similarly maintained its Market Perform stance following the buyback disclosure.
Zillow’s board of directors authorized a substantial enhancement to its stock repurchase framework. Management added $1.25 billion to the existing authorization, elevating total remaining buyback capacity to approximately $1.3 billion.
InvestingPro analytics identified Zillow as possibly trading below intrinsic value at present price levels. The service additionally observed that the equity has exhibited significant price volatility, aligning with recent trading patterns.
JPMorgan’s assessment and the March 24 AI summit represent the primary near-term catalysts capturing investor attention.
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