New York, Jan 9, 2026, 11:35 EST — Regular session
- Gap Inc (NYSE: GAP) shares down 0.2% at $28.35 in late morning trade after a sharp jump a day earlier.
- UBS upgraded the stock to “buy” and lifted its price target to $41, putting new category bets back in focus.
- Traders are watching whether the move can hold near recent highs ahead of key U.S. inflation data next week.
Gap Inc shares edged lower on Friday, giving back a sliver of the prior session’s gains after UBS turned more positive on the retailer’s turnaround and pushed the stock toward the top of its 52-week range. (Fool)
The pullback did little to cool the bigger point: a single analyst note helped reframe Gap’s story as something more than a basics-and-discounts retailer. That matters now because the stock has been moving fast, and investors are trying to decide whether a breakout is real or just a post-upgrade trade.
A lot of the debate is about mix. If Gap can sell more higher-margin add-ons — and stop Athleta from being a drag — it has a clearer path to steadier profit, even if shoppers turn cautious.
UBS analyst Jay Sole upgraded Gap to “buy” from “neutral” and raised his price target to $41 from $26, a price target being the firm’s estimate of where the stock could trade over the next year. He pointed to growth potential in beauty and handbags, and argued Athleta could swing back to growth; he also flagged a streak of comparable sales gains at Gap and Old Navy — comparable sales are sales at stores open at least a year. (Barrons)
In a write-up of the call, Sole said the market was underestimating the scale of Gap’s “reinvigoration playbook,” a reference to management’s push to sharpen product and tighten execution across brands. (Financialcontent)
Gap rose 6.8% on Thursday to $28.42, with the stock trading between $27.79 and $29.09 on Friday in the data snapshot, as volume cooled from the prior day’s spike. (Investing)
Still, the move cuts both ways. If the new categories do not scale, or if the U.S. apparel market slips back into heavy discounting, the stock’s quick run can leave little room for misses.
Next up, investors will juggle company-specific headlines against macro signals on spending and inflation: the U.S. consumer price index is due on Jan. 13 and the Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting is set for Jan. 27-28. (Bls) (Federalreserve)