- Q4 earnings due Tuesday after close; consensus calls for $379.25M revenue (+21% YoY) and EPS of $0.23.
- Morgan Stanley raised its price target on ZETA to $27 from $23, citing easing AI-related risk concerns for application SaaS in 2026.
- A DCF model pegs intrinsic value at $27.28 per share, implying a roughly 19% discount to that estimate at current prices near $22.
Stock fell 8%+ on AI disruption fears earlier this week
Zeta Global Holdings reports Q4 results Tuesday after the bell. The ZETA stock earnings setup is straightforward on paper: analysts project $379.25 million in quarterly revenue, a 21% year-over-year increase, with EPS estimated at $0.23 versus $0.25 in the prior-year period. That EPS comparison is a mild step back. Revenue growth is the number that matters here. Zeta operates an omnichannel, data-driven marketing platform that monetizes first-party data and AI-driven targeting. The bull case rests entirely on whether that model can scale revenue faster than costs. The bear case got a brief moment in the spotlight earlier this week when a Citrini Research report raised concerns about AI becoming a headwind for software companies over the next two years. ZETA dropped more than 8% on Monday — its worst single-day decline in over three months. The stock has since partially recovered, inching higher in overnight trading ahead of the print. Retail sentiment on Stocktwits shifted from bearish to neutral, with message volume spiking over 1,300% in a 24-hour window. That kind of noise is worth noting, not trusting.
Morgan Stanley’s revised $27 price target aligns closely with a DCF-derived intrinsic value estimate of $27.28 per share, based on trailing twelve-month free cash flow of approximately $165.6 million and analyst projections extended through 2035. At the current price near $22, that model implies a discount of roughly 19%. On a price-to-sales basis, ZETA trades at 3.82x — near the broader software industry average of 3.60x but well below a peer group average of 6.39x. A proprietary fair ratio of 4.65x, which accounts for growth profile, margins, and risk, also sits above the current multiple. Both metrics point in the same direction: the stock screens as modestly undervalued relative to its own fundamentals. That said, valuation models are only as good as their assumptions. The optimistic scenario — roughly 25% annual revenue growth, expanding margins, and a path to $2.5 billion in revenue by 2029 — implies a fair value near $39. The cautious scenario, built around tighter data privacy rules, customer concentration risk, and competitive pressure from larger platforms, lands fair value right around the current price. The gap between those two outcomes is wide. Earnings Tuesday will do more to close that gap than any model can.
ZETA enters earnings with a credible growth narrative, a freshly raised analyst price target, and valuation metrics that lean toward undervalued on multiple frameworks. The 8% selloff earlier this week reflects real uncertainty about AI’s long-term impact on marketing software — a risk that hasn’t gone away. Tuesday’s print will test whether 21% revenue growth is achievable and whether management’s commentary on AI integration reassures or unsettles the market. The spread between the bull and bear fair value estimates — $39 versus $22 — tells you this is a high-conviction-required name. Investors without a clear view on Zeta’s data moat and margin trajectory are flying blind into this report.
Q4 revenue versus the $379.25M consensus and any management commentary on AI-related customer demand trends.
Disclaimer: This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All investment decisions and their outcomes are solely the responsibility of the reader.
Sources: Stocktwits, Simply Wall St