New York, March 16, 2026, 10:30 AM EDT
Shares of SoundHound AI climbed roughly 3% early Monday in U.S. trading, after the voice AI firm announced plans to demo a fully on-device automotive assistant at Nvidia’s GTC event in San Jose this week. The stock hovered near $7.53 following the news. SoundHound described the system as running “entirely on the edge”—industry parlance for handling processing locally, not via remote cloud servers. GlobeNewswire
The race to dominate next-gen voice assistants is heating up, and space is tight. Amazon has launched Alexa+ nationwide and it’s headed for BMW’s next in-car system. Google, for its part, is pushing Gemini into Android Auto. All this ups the stakes for smaller voice AI vendors chasing automakers and enterprise buyers. Amazon News
Commentary on SoundHound has turned sharply divided. On March 13, Zacks analyst Shrabana Mukherjee pitted SoundHound against Amazon, pointing out that both sit at a Zacks Rank #3—Hold. Over at Motley Fool, Keithen Drury ran the numbers March 12, calculating that for SoundHound to deliver a 10x return by 2030, it would have to log about 58% annual growth for five straight years. Zacks
The bearish argument hasn’t pulled any punches. A March 13 piece from Yahoo Finance-linked Insider Monkey brought back Jim Cramer’s earlier criticism, where he called SoundHound “one of those companies that is a meme stock.” The article also pointed to his December 2025 comment: the company, he said, “doesn’t make any money.” Insider Monkey
SoundHound’s numbers continue to split opinion. Fourth-quarter revenue climbed 59% year over year to $55.1 million, while full-year revenue hit $168.9 million—almost double last year’s figure. The company projects 2026 revenue in the $225 million to $260 million range. Cash on hand was $248 million at the close of 2025, with zero debt reported. SoundHound AI
Management is pushing the growth narrative hard. CEO Keyvan Mohajer described AI disruption as bringing “strong tailwinds” for SoundHound. CFO Nitesh Sharan pointed to the quarter’s “broad-based customer adoption” and noted that time to value is speeding up, as the company landed a record haul of enterprise deals. SoundHound AI
SoundHound is making a move into agentic AI—software designed to handle multi-step tasks with minimal human input. On Monday, the company unveiled a platform built to run locally on Nvidia’s DRIVE AGX Orin. It’s a system that merges voice, vision, and reasoning capabilities right inside the vehicle. According to SoundHound, this setup should boost speed and uptime, and keep data private when network connections falter or drop out. GlobeNewswire
Still, there are caveats even with the optimistic scenario. Drury pointed out that Wall Street is projecting growth to fall off to roughly 38% in 2026, then down to 20% the year after—that’s not enough to get to a 10x return. He also flagged the risk that a bigger generative AI player could easily squeeze out SoundHound’s market position. The Motley Fool
SoundHound closed out Monday a bit over $7.50—still nowhere near the $22.17 high The Motley Fool flagged not long ago. That distance keeps fueling both wild 10x forecasts and the usual meme-stock cautions, sometimes in the same week. The Motley Fool