New York, June 13, 2026, 09:02 (ET)
- Roku closed at $143.66 after reports it is exploring strategic options, including a possible sale.
- The streaming platform is also scheduled to join the S&P MidCap 400 before trading opens on June 22.
- After the rally, valuation risk has risen even as advertising growth and analyst optimism support the bull case.
Roku, Inc. shares surged Friday after reports that the streaming-TV platform is exploring strategic options, including a possible sale of the company. The stock closed at $143.66, up about 20%, after trading as high as $148.49, giving Roku a market value of roughly $21.7 billion.
The move matters because takeover speculation can reset how investors value a company: buyers may pay a premium for strategic assets, but the premium can evaporate if talks fail. Reuters reported that Roku has discussed a potential combination with at least one U.S. media company, while also exploring other options such as a PIPE, or private investment in public equity, which is a direct investment into a public company by outside investors. Reuters also reported that no final decision has been made and that Roku did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The bull case is that Roku controls a large connected-TV audience at a time when ad dollars continue shifting from traditional TV to streaming. Roku’s first-quarter shareholder letter showed platform revenue rose 28% year over year to $1.13 billion, streaming hours climbed 8% to 38.7 billion, and management raised its 2026 platform revenue outlook to about $5.0 billion. Adjusted EBITDA, a profit metric that excludes items such as interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, is now expected to reach $675 million this year.
The timing also lines up with a more bullish Wall Street narrative. Evercore ISI analyst Robert Coolbrith maintained an outperform rating and raised his Roku price target to $185 from $160, according to Investors.com and Benzinga. That followed Roku’s May 27 home-screen overhaul, which the company says will reach more than 100 million streaming households and gives more visibility to its Marquee ad placement, a prominent advertising unit on the TV home screen.
The bear case is that Friday’s rally pulled a lot of future good news into the stock price. Roku’s latest quote implies a price-to-earnings ratio of about 106, meaning investors are paying roughly 106 times the company’s trailing earnings per share. That is a demanding valuation if a sale does not happen, especially because Reuters noted that the ad-supported streaming market is becoming more crowded, with rivals such as Fox’s Tubi and Paramount’s Pluto TV competing for viewers and advertising budgets.
Investors also have a scheduled technical catalyst ahead. S&P Dow Jones Indices said Roku will be added to the S&P MidCap 400, a benchmark for mid-sized U.S. companies, before the market opens on Monday, June 22. Index inclusion can create short-term demand because funds that track the index often need to buy the stock to match the benchmark, although that demand is separate from Roku’s business fundamentals.
For now, Roku appears risky rather than clearly cheap after the 20% jump. The stock is trading above Benzinga’s listed consensus price target of $139.44, though still below Evercore’s fresh $185 target, leaving the debate centered on whether investors should value Roku as a standalone advertising-growth story or as a potential acquisition target. The next major catalyst is any confirmed update on strategic alternatives; without that, attention will shift to the June 22 index addition and then to whether Roku can keep platform revenue and adjusted EBITDA tracking ahead of its raised 2026 outlook.