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Axios
Axios
Business
Dion Rabouin

Investor blowback against Lyft has been fast and furious since the stock debuted last week

Lyft team rings Nasdaq opening bell. Photo: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Investor blowback against Lyft has been fast and furious since the stock debuted last week.

Driving the news: Seaport Global analysts Michael Ward seared the company with a scathing "sell" recommendation on its third day of trading, notching a $42 target — $26 a share lower than its price at the time.


  • Short sellers have now joined the fray, with 12.4 million shares shorted at a value of $856 million, making the newly public company the 27th most shorted large U.S. stock. Short sellers have clamored to "rent" Lyft shares, paying an average of 101.40% borrow fee to bet against it. That's the highest fee of any domestic stock with more than $50 million of short interest, according to data from S3 Partners.
  • Carl Icahn sold his roughly 2.7% stake in the company, worth around $550 million based on the IPO price, before the company went public, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The bottom line: The stock opened well above its IPO price of $72 on the first day of trading, but has fallen by more than 20% from its first trade price.

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