Buy, Hold, or Sell: SoundHound AI Slid 20% in June Despite a Massive $100 Million Acquisition. Is SOUN a Buy at $7.35?

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • SOUN trades at $7.35 with a consensus analyst target of $14, but the smarter entry sits near $6.50 amid ongoing dilution risk.

  • SoundHound's $100 million LivePerson deal targets $350 million in 2027 revenue, but a $300 million ATM filing and deep cash burn cloud the setup.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and SoundHound AI didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Buy, Hold, or Sell: SoundHound AI Slid 20% in June Despite a Massive $100 Million Acquisition. Is SOUN a Buy at $7.35?

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At $7.35, SoundHound AI (NASDAQ:SOUN) screens as a wait-and-watch setup, with research framing suggesting a more attractive entry near $6.50 on macro-driven weakness. The voice AI specialist absorbed a brutal June sell-off despite announcing a $100 million acquisition of LivePerson.

SoundHound builds an independent voice and agentic AI platform spanning automotive, restaurants, financial services, and IoT, with brands including OASYS, Amelia, Smart Answering, and Dynamic Drive-Thru. After peaking near $22.17 in the last 52 weeks, shares have unwound to $7.33 on dilution fears, an ATM filing, and AI-sector multiple compression.

Why The LivePerson Deal Could Reset The Story

Q1 revenue grew 52% year over year to $44.20 million, with core automotive and IoT organic growth at 88% excluding acquisitions. Management reaffirmed $225 million to $260 million in 2026 revenue and projected $350 million to $400 million in 2027 once LivePerson closes, with a combined $500 million revenue opportunity from existing customers alone.

The customer roster includes 25 of the Fortune 100, 12 of the top 15 global banks, and 4 of the top 5 global automakers post-close. Cantor Fitzgerald reiterated a Buy with a $15 price target, and the Street consensus target sits at $14, implying material upside if execution holds.

Why The Bear Case Has Teeth Right Now

Profitability remains elusive. Q1 operating cash burn ran negative $26.26 million, full-year 2025 cash burn hit negative $98.22 million, and stock-based compensation totaled $80.6 million for FY2025. On May 27, the company filed for an ATM offering of up to $300 million in Class A stock, fueling dilution concerns.

Valuation looks stretched at 16x trailing sales and a forward P/E of 227x. Add disclosed material weaknesses in internal controls, an active class action, Zacks’ Rank #4 (Sell), and a CFO transition to the headwinds.

Why Patience Beats Conviction At $7.35

The bull-bear gap is unusually wide. Organic growth is accelerating, the LivePerson integration could unlock scale, and agentic AI remains a structural winner. Yet cash burn, dilution risk, and governance flags argue against full conviction at current levels. A retest of the 52-week low near $5.83 on broader AI-trade weakness would offer better risk-reward than chasing here.

Watch three things quarterly: organic automotive and IoT growth holding above 60%, the LivePerson close in H2 2026, and adjusted EBITDA losses narrowing from the Q4 2025 earnings report figure of negative $7.43 million.

The Numbers Behind The Verdict

SOUN trades at $7.33 with a market cap near $2.99 billion. The consensus analyst price target stands at $14, implying roughly 91% upside. Coverage skews bullish, with 7 Buy ratings and 1 Hold.

SOUN is down 26.48% year to date and 12.84% over the past month, while the S&P 500 is up roughly 10.4% year to date. With a beta of 2.74, additional macro selling could easily push shares into the trigger zone.

Why $7.35 Looks Like A Difficult Entry

At $7.35, the risk-reward looks balanced rather than compelling. The fundamental story is intact: organic growth is durable, OASYS is a genuine technology lead, and LivePerson credibly accelerates the path to a $500 million revenue base. But shares sit above the 50-day moving average implied trajectory yet well below the 200-day at $11.05, suggesting more downside discovery before a clean base forms.

A retest of $6.50 or lower driven by macro AI weakness would offer enough margin of safety to underwrite the dilution risk and integration timeline. The thesis would deteriorate on a busted LivePerson close, a sub-$200 million guide-down, or organic automotive growth decelerating below 50%.

The cost of patience is small: missing a quick bounce. The cost of acting prematurely is large: catching a falling knife with $300 million of fresh equity issuance overhead and unresolved governance issues. A retest toward $6.50 would screen as a more disciplined research entry than $7.35.

 

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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