New York, June 10, 2026, 12:04 (ET)
- Lemonade shares jumped 10.6% late Wednesday morning, hitting an intraday peak above $60.
- CEO Daniel Schreiber and CFO Tim Bixby were at Morgan Stanley’s U.S. Financials Conference when the move was announced.
- TD Cowen’s new target gave a lift, but investors are watching to see if Lemonade can turn in positive adjusted EBITDA in Q4.
Lemonade, Inc. climbed on Wednesday after the insurance tech firm’s latest conference slot and an analyst target boost gave investors more to chew on around profitability. Shares traded at $59.28, up $5.70 from Tuesday, after reaching $60.77 earlier in the session.
Lemonade CEO Daniel Schreiber and CFO Tim Bixby had a 9 a.m. ET fireside chat at the Morgan Stanley U.S. Financials Conference, plus one-on-one investor meetings. A transcript went live Wednesday morning on MarketScreener/S&P Capital IQ, pushing the company’s comments back in front of investors while the market was open.
No fresh quarterly numbers or SEC filings dropped Wednesday. The stock looks like it moved as investors took another look at the same updates they already knew — faster premium growth, smaller losses, and management’s guidance for positive adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter. Adjusted EBITDA, which the company defines, cuts out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and some non-cash costs. Investors watch this number to see if the core business is heading for profit before GAAP earnings show up.
TD Cowen was the latest analyst to move on Lemonade. The firm bumped its price target on the stock to $55 from $33 on June 8, sticking with its Hold rating, MT Newswires reported via MarketScreener. Even with the higher target, that’s still below where Lemonade traded late Wednesday morning. So the stock’s surge looks less like a typical analyst-upgrade play and more like traders betting the company’s guidance has more room to run.
Lemonade’s first-quarter numbers are in. In-force premium jumped 32% from a year ago to $1.33 billion. Revenue also up—climbed 71% to $258 million. Gross profit surged 159% to $100 million. The customer count reached 3.14 million, up 23%.
Lemonade is still in the red, but the losses are coming down. The company posted a net loss of $35.8 million, or 47 cents a share, for the first quarter. That’s smaller than the $62.4 million, or 86 cents a share, loss from a year ago. Adjusted EBITDA loss was $17.1 million, narrowing from $47.0 million. Revenue was higher and underwriting improved, though spending on growth went up too.
Investors are zeroing in on underwriting. Lemonade’s gross loss ratio fell to 62% in the first quarter, down from 78% the year before. The loss ratio tracks losses and claims-adjustment costs as a share of earned premiums. A drop in the ratio often signals the insurer is either getting a better read on pricing risk or dealing with fewer high-cost claims on its premiums.
Lemonade bumped up its 2026 outlook in the Q1 shareholder letter. The company now sees revenue for the year between $1.197 billion and $1.203 billion and is guiding to an adjusted EBITDA loss of $47 million to $51 million. Management kept its call for positive adjusted EBITDA in Q4.
Wednesday’s action matters for Lemonade. The market isn’t pricing the company like Progressive or Allstate. It’s treating Lemonade as a high-growth insurance tech firm that still needs to show its AI can deliver underwriting and customer growth without burning through cash. Lemonade said its AI-led approach has let it more than double in-force premium and cut its team by 6% since late 2022.
Lemonade flagged several risks for investors in its 10-Q. The company said it has a history of losses, might not turn a profit, faces competition, and its AI could misprice or mishandle claims. Lemonade also said severe weather and disasters are hard to predict. Reinsurance is in place, but if reinsurers don’t pay, pay late, or if losses go over contract limits, Lemonade still has to pay its policyholders.
Lemonade’s cash totaled $374.3 million at March 31, with $669.4 million in investments. That gives the company some breathing room, but it’s not open-ended. Borrowings under Lemonade’s customer-investment financing agreement stood at $179.6 million.
Lemonade has locked in Nov. 17 in New York for its 2026 Investor Day, setting the stage for its next big event. Investors now turn to the second-quarter numbers to see if revenue, loss ratios, and adjusted EBITDA are keeping up with the company’s target for profitability in Q4.