RBC Capital Markets raised its target price for Google (GOOG Quote) on Tuesday, as a former Schwab SoundView analyst assumed coverage of the search-engine phenomenon and other Internet stocks.
New RBC analyst Jordan Rohan issued a report Tuesday dubbing Google his top pick and assigning a price target to the stock of $235. That price is $90 higher than RBC's previous target for the stock -- which RBC had previously rated sector perform -- and it's also $35 higher than the target that Rohan had on the stock before he departed from SoundView, which is now owned by UBS. Rohan's new price target is now the highest among Wall Street analysts for the stock, according to Reuters data. The $235 target edges past the $225 mark set by Credit Suisse First Boston's Heath Terry. Other members of the $200-plus club include Goldman Sachs' Anthony Noto, who has a $215 target price, and American Technology Research's Mark Mahaney, who is aiming for $210. Both CSFB and Goldman were underwriters of Google's IPO. Behind these targets is optimism about Google's prospects for growth and continued investor demand for its shares. But other investors cite the risk of increasing competition in the search market -- particularly from Microsoft(MSFT Quote) -- as well as the steady increase in Google's freely tradeable shares, which could diminish the effect that Google's small float has had in pushing up the stock price. Google's shares, which went public in August at $85 apiece, were trading Tuesday at $195.69, up 63 cents. Among other Internet stocks, Rohan initiated coverage on auction giant eBay (EBAY Quote) with an outperform rating and a price target of $130, and on smaller search firm FindWhat.com (FWHT Quote), with a sector perform rating and a $20 price target. Rohan also picked up coverage of Yahoo! (YHOO Quote) and Ask Jeeves (ASKJ Quote) from RBC analyst Stephen Jue, who will be focusing on ecommerce stocks. Yahoo! -- shares in which fell 27 cents Tuesday to $36.05 -- has a price target of $42 and an outperform rating; Ask Jeeves is rated sector perform. (RBC hasn't done any investment banking for any of the stocks Rohan is covering.) Asked why he bumped his target price for Google from $200 to $235, Rohan attributes his increased optimism to Google's prospects in Western Europe.



