On June 5, Sterling Construction Company declined 5.41% in regular trading, trading at $924.38/share, with trading volume of $94.12 million. Earlier in the session, the stock surged to as high as $1,004.95 before rapidly reversing lower.
On the news front, the sharp pullback came after the stock broke through Oppenheimer's $950 target price set in its first coverage initiation with an Outperform rating. The investment bank highlighted that the company's acquisition of CEC Facilities Group has elevated it into the ranks of top-tier specialty service providers, with data center site development contributing over 20% operating margins. Electronic infrastructure backlog signals high-margin revenue ahead, and the acquisition is expected to enhance large-project capabilities and bolster order reserves.
The stock had rallied significantly in prior sessions approaching the target, rising from $845.39 on June 1. With the target price breached intraday, heavy profit-taking pressure emerged, driving the reversal. The company reported Q1 EPS of $3.39, with revenue growing 91.59% year-over-year and net income surging 143.63%.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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