Vivid Seats (NASDAQ:SEAT) has had a brutal stretch. Shares have fallen 12.13% over the past week, 10.37% over the past month and 23.43% year-to-date. Over the past year, the stock is down 90.63%, a collapse that has pushed shares far below their 52-week high of $62.40.
Most analysts on the Street have responded by pulling back their targets, with the consensus sitting at $11.88. But Benchmark is holding firm with a Buy rating and a $10 price target. Canaccord, by contrast, also landed at $10 but with a Hold rating, lowered from $12. Can SEAT realistically reach $10 by the end of 2026?
Benchmark’s $10 SEAT Prediction
Benchmark acknowledges that consumer and AI fears are unlikely to abate soon, but argues the story is getting “cleaner” after a painful reset. The firm points to consolidation as a real potential catalyst, with Vivid Seats now trading at a price-to-sales ratio of just 0.14x and an EV/EBITDA of roughly 6x, making it a credible takeout candidate at depressed valuations.
Key Drivers of SEAT Stock Performance
- Consolidation potential: With the ticketing industry under pressure and Vivid Seats trading near multi-year lows, the company’s technology platform and Vivid Seats Rewards loyalty program represent strategic assets that a larger player could acquire at a fraction of prior valuations. A buyout at a premium to current trading levels would reflect a significant change from where shares trade today.
- Cleaner business story: The Corporate Simplification completed in October 2025 eliminated the dual-class share structure and is expected to save up to $180 million in lifetime tax payments. A $60 million annualized cost savings target further improves the long-term earnings trajectory.
- Valuation reset and guidance floor: Management guided for full-year 2026 Marketplace GOV of $2.2 billion to $2.6 billion and Adjusted EBITDA of $30 million to $40 million, with Q1 cash expected to rebuild to $125 million to $135 million. That guidance range provides a financial reference point for evaluating the stock.
What Will It Take for SEAT to Reach $10?
With 10,725,300 shares outstanding, getting to $10 requires three things: stabilization in Marketplace GOV as the company laps the loss of its major private label client, measurable traction from the enhanced app strategy, and either a credible acquisition rumor or demonstrated progress toward positive free cash flow. CEO Lawrence Fey noted that “the trends we are seeing in the first quarter confirm that our strategy and execution are delivering measurable results.”
The primary risk is the balance sheet: total debt stands at $387.4 million against negative shareholders equity of -$85.1 million. Still, Benchmark’s conviction that consolidation remains a real catalyst and the business narrative is simplifying underpins the $10 target.