New York, April 27, 2026, 10:01 EDT
SoundHound AI slipped roughly 1.4% to $8.075 just after the Nasdaq bell Monday, with investors picking over its move to acquire LivePerson entirely in stock. The deal raised fresh doubts on dilution, integration and profitability. LivePerson also lost ground, off 0.7% at $2.70.
Timing is crucial here, as SoundHound aims to prove its voice AI tech is breaking out of the pilot phase. Just last week, the company renewed and broadened its deal with Casey’s, extending coverage to more than 2,600 locations. SoundHound said its voice agents have already managed upwards of 21 million guest interactions. For Casey’s, CIO Sanjeev Satturu described the arrangement as a way to “scale a proven solution” when order volumes spike. SoundHound AI
LivePerson is the larger gamble here. SoundHound struck a deal to acquire the customer-service software company for about $43 million in equity—roughly a 22% premium over LivePerson’s average price over the past 30 days, weighted by trading volume. After factoring in debt and cash, the enterprise value stands at about $250 million. The companies expect the deal to close in the back half of 2026, pending regulatory and other approvals.
SoundHound plans to merge its voice and agentic AI — the latter built to handle tasks with less need for human input — with LivePerson’s digital messaging system, which processes around one billion customer messages every month. SoundHound CEO Keyvan Mohajer described the firms as “two complementary conversational AI pioneers.” For LivePerson, CEO John Sabino pointed out that as customers shift between phone, text, and web, the line between “talking” and “typing” is disappearing. SoundHound AI
Wedbush reiterated its Outperform rating on SoundHound and left its $12 12-month price target unchanged after the news. The firm pointed to the deal’s potential to expand SoundHound’s reach and build a deeper data edge. According to Wedbush, this acquisition pushes SoundHound into the AI-powered digital customer service space and could generate a data set of “tens of billions” of customer interactions annually. Proactiveinvestors NA
SoundHound is aiming high compared to where it stands now. The company laid out 2027 revenue expectations of at least $350 million to $400 million for the combined group, counting $100 million or more from LivePerson’s customer roster. Executives say cross-selling could move that figure closer to $500 million using just the current clients. Motley Fool’s Jack Delaney pointed out that would mark a steep climb from SoundHound’s projected 2025 revenue, which sits at just under $169 million.
SoundHound pitches itself as a way for restaurants, automakers, and retailers to develop custom voice tech—without surrendering extra data to giants like Microsoft or Google. Still, Motley Fool’s Leo Sun points out a hitch: revenue jumped more than fivefold between 2022 and 2025, but acquisitions did most of the heavy lifting, and gross margin slipped from 69% to 42%.
LivePerson could end up piling on complexity just as SoundHound’s path to steady profits remains unproven. According to TheStreet, some investors’ first move was to focus on the all-stock deal—LivePerson shareholders get SoundHound shares, potentially diluting current holders—before taking another look at LivePerson’s cash and the planned debt paydown. But the stock’s still missing a reliable profit story, and that’s the sticking point for how much of the AI premium SOUN can hold onto.
Investors won’t have to wait long for the next update. SoundHound plans to release first-quarter earnings after the bell on May 7, with a conference call set for 5 p.m. ET. That timing offers a sharper look at growth, margins, and cash flow ahead of the LivePerson deal wrap-up.
Right now, the bet isn’t only on SoundHound’s ability to purchase revenue. It hinges on how well it folds in LivePerson, keeps its client base intact, manages dilution, and pushes a wider conversational AI portfolio toward consistent profits.