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Key Takeaways
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Zillow Group shares are jumping Thursday after the real estate firm posted strong third-quarter sales gains and narrowed its losses.
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Zillow reported third-quarter revenue of $581 million, up 17% year-over-year.
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The company's shares are up 40% since it named Jeremy Wacksman as the new CEO in August.
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JPMorgan analysts raised their price target on Zillow to $78 from $61, citing a “solid outlook” amid a “challenging housing market.”
Zillow Group (Z) shares are jumping Thursday, after the real estate firm posted strong third-quarter sales gains and narrowed its losses.
Zillow reported third-quarter revenue of $581 million, up 17% year-over-year, and above the midpoint of the range the company had previously offered. Its net loss for the three months to Sept. 30 narrowed to $20 million, from a $28 million loss the same period last year.
Sales during the period outperformed the 2% total transaction value growth of broader residential real estate industry, the listings site said, citing the National Association of Realtors (NAR). The company also offered a fourth-quarter revenue outlook of $525 million to $540 million, with analysts tracked by Visible Alpha looking for about $537 million.
Zillow's shares rose 22% Thursday morning.
Zillow Stock Has Surged Since New CEO Named in August
Zillow is projecting fourth-quarter revenue in the range of $525 million to $540 million and said it is sticking with its forecast for full-year double-digit revenue growth.
The company’s stock is up 40% through Wednesday's close since it named a new Chief Executive Officer (CEO), former Chief Operating Officer (COO) Jeremy Wacksman, alongside better-than-expected second-quarter results, in early August. The shares are just a few percentage points in the green for the year, though.
The company has been a beneficiary of lower U.S. mortgage rates, according to analysts, U.S. 30-year mortgage rates, currently at a 6.91% average, have fallen off their 2024 high of 7.52% on April 25.
JPMorgan analysts raised their price target on Zillow to $78 from $61, citing a “solid outlook” amid a “challenging housing market.”
UPDATE—Nov. 7, 2024: This article has been updated to include fresh stock prices.