These Analysts Just Made A Substantial Downgrade To Their Open Lending Corporation (NASDAQ:LPRO) EPS Forecasts
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The latest analyst coverage could presage a bad day for Open Lending Corporation (NASDAQ:LPRO), with the analysts making across-the-board cuts to their statutory estimates that might leave shareholders a little shell-shocked. Revenue and earnings per share (EPS) forecasts were both revised downwards, with the analysts seeing grey clouds on the horizon.
After this downgrade, Open Lending's ten analysts are now forecasting revenues of US$120m in 2025. This would be a sizeable 26% improvement in sales compared to the last 12 months. Statutory earnings per share are presumed to soar 413% to US$0.20. Previously, the analysts had been modelling revenues of US$134m and earnings per share (EPS) of US$0.26 in 2025. It looks like analyst sentiment has declined substantially, with a measurable cut to revenue estimates and a pretty serious decline to earnings per share numbers as well.
View our latest analysis for Open Lending
Despite the cuts to forecast earnings, there was no real change to the US$7.25 price target, showing that the analysts don't think the changes have a meaningful impact on its intrinsic value.
Looking at the bigger picture now, one of the ways we can make sense of these forecasts is to see how they measure up against both past performance and industry growth estimates. It's clear from the latest estimates that Open Lending's rate of growth is expected to accelerate meaningfully, with the forecast 20% annualised revenue growth to the end of 2025 noticeably faster than its historical growth of 2.1% p.a. over the past five years. Compare this with other companies in the same industry, which are forecast to grow their revenue 5.7% annually. Factoring in the forecast acceleration in revenue, it's pretty clear that Open Lending is expected to grow much faster than its industry.
The Bottom Line
The biggest issue in the new estimates is that analysts have reduced their earnings per share estimates, suggesting business headwinds lay ahead for Open Lending. Unfortunately, analysts also downgraded their revenue estimates, although our data indicates revenues are expected to perform better than the wider market. The lack of change in the price target is puzzling in light of the downgrade but, with a serious decline expected next year, we wouldn't be surprised if investors were a bit wary of Open Lending.
With that said, the long-term trajectory of the company's earnings is a lot more important than next year. At Simply Wall St, we have a full range of analyst estimates for Open Lending going out to 2026, and you can see them free on our platform here.