Why AppLovin Stock Was Taking a Dive Today | The Motley Fool
Briefly

Why AppLovin Stock Was Taking a Dive Today | The Motley Fool
"Shares of AppLovin were heading lower today in an apparent response to Google's Project Genie, a new prototype from Google DeepMind that allows users to create virtual worlds for gaming with AI. The news sparked a sell-off among gaming stocks as Unity Software, Take-Two Interactive Software, and Roblox all fell sharply on the news. Applovin stock was down 11.7% as of 1:13 p.m. ET."
"The sell-off in AppLovin seems surprising because the company isn't a game developer anymore. It sold that part of its business last year as its adtech platform began to take off. Much of its business still relates to mobile games, but it's monetizing that through advertising, rather than game sales and fees. It's unclear if Project Genie will be disruptive to the mobile gaming industry, but it could potentially be a tailwind for AppLovin if it opens up new ad inventory in mobile gaming."
"AppLovin stock could also be facing pressure from a broader sell-off in software stocks, which has continued as the fast-growing adtech stock trades at a lofty price-to-sales ratio of 31 even after today's decline. The company will get a chance to redirect the narrative when it reports fourth-quarter earnings on Feb. 11. Analysts are expecting revenue, which includes a headwind from the sales of the apps business, to grow 17.4% to $1.61 billion, and for adjusted earnings per share to jump from $1.73 to $2.95."
Google DeepMind introduced Project Genie, a prototype that lets users create AI-generated virtual worlds for gaming. The release triggered a sell-off across gaming stocks, with Unity, Take-Two, and Roblox falling and AppLovin shares down 11.7% by early afternoon. AppLovin exited game development last year and now primarily monetizes mobile gaming through advertising rather than game sales. Project Genie’s impact on mobile gaming remains uncertain; it could disrupt the industry or expand ad inventory, potentially benefiting adtech firms. AppLovin trades at a high price-to-sales ratio near 31, and analysts expect fourth-quarter revenue of $1.61 billion and adjusted EPS of $2.95.
Read at The Motley Fool
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]