
Analysts' Actions -- American Eagle, Fitbit, Lululemon, Lockheed Martin and More
RATINGS CHANGES
American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) - Get Report was downgraded to perform from outperform at Oppenheimer. $17 price target. With the stock up 35% over the past year, the valuation no longer looks as attractive, Oppenheimer said.
AMC Networks (AMCX) - Get Report was upgraded to buy at TheStreet Ratings. You can view the full analysis from the report here: AMCX.
Fitbit (FIT) - Get Report was upgraded to overweight from equal-weight at Barclays. $49 price target. With the stock down 26% over the past month, the valuation looks attractive, Barclays said.
Lockheed Martin (LMT) - Get Report was downgraded to underweight at Barclays. The company's new business segments will likely pressure margins, Barclays said.
Lululemon Athletica (LULU) - Get Report was downgraded to market perform from outperform at FBR Capital Markets. $42 price target. The company is seeing higher clearance sales levels, which will likely pressure margins, FBR said.
New York Community Bancorp (NYCB) - Get Report was upgraded to buy from neutral at Bank of America/Merrill Lynch. $18 price target. Growth should accelerate, driven by synergies from the Astoria Financial deal, analysts said.
Prestige Brands (PBH) - Get Report was downgraded to underperform from hold at Jefferies. The valuation looks less attractive, based on a $44 price target, Jefferies said.
Paccar (PCAR) - Get Report was downgraded to sector perform at RBC Capital Markets. $57 price target. Expect the domestic Class 8 truck market to be near peak demand, RBC said.
Philip Morris (PM) - Get Report was upgraded to neutral from reduce at Nomura Securities. $88 price target. Industry volume trends are improving, Nomura said.
Raytheon (RTN) - Get Report was downgraded to equal-weight at Barclays. The stock looks attractive based on a $125 price target, Barclays said.
T-Mobile U.S. (TMUS) - Get Report was downgraded to hold at TheStreet Ratings. You can view the full analysis from the report here: TMUS.
This article was written by a staff member of TheStreet.








