Beyond Meat had a rough Wednesday. The stock fell around 12% after a disappointing fourth-quarter earnings report raised fresh questions about the company’s path forward.
Beyond Meat, Inc., BYND
Q4 revenue came in at $61.6 million, down 19.7% year-over-year and below analyst expectations. Weakness showed up in both retail and foodservice channels, a sign that demand for plant-based products continues to struggle broadly.
Gross margin fell to just 2.3% in the quarter. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA remained deeply negative, even as the company reported net income thanks to a one-time, non-cash gain tied to debt restructuring.
That debt restructuring has helped ease some near-term pressure on liquidity. But Jefferies analyst Kaumil Gajrawala said there is still considerable work needed to bring cash burn under control.
Jefferies cut its price target on BYND from $1.25 to $0.70 following the results, while keeping a Hold rating. The new target is based on 3.25 times the firm’s 2027 sales estimate of $250 million.
The firm flagged low visibility into when sales might stabilize. It also noted that margin improvement requires a bigger lift than what the current demand environment allows.
Investor confidence took another knock after Beyond Meat delayed its annual report filing multiple times during March. Management pointed to “material weaknesses” in internal controls, specifically around inventory accounting and how it handles obsolete products.
That kind of disclosure tends to spook investors, and this time was no different. It added to an already difficult backdrop and raised questions about operational discipline inside the company.
Management is working on a repositioning strategy that includes entering adjacent categories like protein beverages and right-sizing operations. Whether those moves will be enough to shift the demand picture remains unclear.
Full-year revenue over the last twelve months stood at $291 million, with gross profit margins of just 9.9%. The stock is down 77% over the past year.
The broader analyst community isn’t rushing to upgrade the stock. Wall Street currently holds a Moderate Sell consensus on BYND, based on one Hold and two Sell ratings over the past three months.
The average price target sits at $0.85, which implies about 37% upside from current levels — but that gap reflects how beaten-down the stock already is, not a surge in optimism.
Beyond Meat has set a goal of reaching positive EBITDA by late 2026. Analysts remain skeptical about whether the company can hit that target given ongoing margin pressure and the scrutiny around its internal controls.
The company’s stock currently trades at $0.63.
The post Beyond Meat (BYND) Stock Falls 12% As Jefferies Slashes Price Target appeared first on CoinCentral.


