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LSE:BPT 19 January 2026

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  • Viking Holdings (VIK) Shows 109% Rally But Remains Undervalued: DCF Analysis
    May 28, 2026, 12:43 AM EDT. Viking Holdings (VIK) has surged 108.8% over the past year, driven by strong cruise travel demand and positive discretionary spending sentiment. Despite this rally, a discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis estimates an intrinsic value of $152.89 versus the current share price near $92.55, suggesting the stock trades at a 39.5% discount. Simply Wall St rates Viking holdings undervalued by half on tested valuation metrics. Investors continue to monitor booking trends, capacity plans and sector positioning as key factors. This mix of rapid price gains with a still-undervalued status invites reassessment of Viking Holdings within the broader hospitality industry outlook.

Latest articles

Wall Street After-Hours Signals Following Record Highs

Wall Street After-Hours Signals Following Record Highs

28 May 2026
The Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq closed at record highs Wednesday, with the Dow up 182.60 points to 50,644.28. Snowflake shares surged after hours on a raised outlook and a $6 billion AWS deal, while Salesforce fell on a weaker revenue forecast. Oil prices rebounded as U.S.-Iran tensions rose. Major ETFs traded mixed in late action.
ServiceNow Skips Software Drop as Traders Watch

ServiceNow Skips Software Drop as Traders Watch

28 May 2026
ServiceNow shares rose 2.2% to $102.12 Wednesday, outperforming software peers as investors responded to signs of steady enterprise demand. Oppenheimer reaffirmed its Outperform rating and $130 target after a customer survey. The stock remains well below last year’s peak despite the rebound. Roughly 28.5 million shares traded, with a market cap near $106.2 billion.
No Leis for Hawaiian Flight Attendants as Alaska Merger Strain Grows

No Leis for Hawaiian Flight Attendants as Alaska Merger Strain Grows

28 May 2026
About 250 Hawaiian Airlines flight attendants based in Seattle must stop wearing leis, flowers, and aloha shirts on Alaska-branded Boeing 787 flights under new uniform rules. The change comes as Alaska Air Group merges operations and expands long-haul routes from Seattle to cities like Rome and London. Alaska and Hawaiian continue as separate brands but now share systems and a single FAA operating certificate.
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