Pop Mart Plunges on Earnings: A Buy at HKD150?

Pop Mart shares fell more than 14% in afternoon trading, marking the largest intraday decline since April 7 of last year. Although the company’s full-year revenue and net profit came in broadly in line with expectations, sales of non-Labubu IP products fell short of expectations, weighing on sentiment. 2025 Financial Highlights Revenue: RMB 37.12 billion, up 184.7% YoY (vs. RMB 37.96 billion expected) Net Profit: RMB 12.78 billion, up 308.8% YoY (vs. RMB 12.64 billion expected) Final Dividend per Share: RMB 2.38 (vs. RMB 0.81 in the previous year)

avatarNaingak9u
03-28 18:18
$POP MART(09992)$  will slowly go down first. And then will see it significantly drop.
avatarWeChats
03-28 14:46
$POP MART(09992)$  Pop Mart Plunges 14% — Is the Labubu Hype Hiding a Bigger Problem? 📉 Pop Mart (09992.HK) just experienced its most brutal intraday flush in over a year, cratering more than 14% in afternoon trading. At first glance, the earnings report didn't look disastrous—full-year revenue and net profit actually came in broadly in line with Wall Street expectations. But dig one inch below the surface, and the catalyst for the violent sell-off becomes glaringly obvious: extreme IP concentration risk. Sales of non-Labubu IPs severely missed the mark, proving that the company's recent valuation premium has been propped up almost entirely by a single, cute, monster-sized trend. Here is why the smart money is hitting the sell button, and ho
publishing my first trade related post now The recent earnings report from Pop Mart has sent shockwaves through the market, with the stock price plunging toward the HKD 150 level. For investors, this creates a classic dilemma: is this a falling knife to avoid, or a golden opportunity to buy a market leader at a discount? The Catalyst for the Plunge Pop Mart’s recent "plunge" is largely driven by a disconnect between high growth expectations and the reality of a tightening consumer landscape. While the company continues to dominate the "blind box" and designer toy economy, any slight miss in margins or a cautious forward-looking statement can trigger a mass sell-off. In a volatile market, investors often "sell first and ask questions later" when a high-flying growth stock shows even a hint