Today: 15 July 2026
SoundHound AI Stock Fell After Record Revenue. Cash Burn Is What Spooked Wall Street

SoundHound AI Stock Just Jumped. Monday May Tell If The Rally Has Legs

New York, May 31, 2026, 13:02 EDT

SoundHound AI Inc (SOUN.O) closed out a holiday-shortened week with a sharp move higher, rising 5.14% on Friday to $9.00 and finishing just over 10% above its May 22 close. Volume rose to about 40.6 million shares, well above the levels seen earlier in the week.

The timing matters. U.S. stock trading is shut on Sunday, and Nasdaq’s regular session runs Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. The prior week was also shortened by the Memorial Day closure on May 25, leaving traders four sessions to reset positions before Monday’s open.

The move came into a strong tape for technology and AI-linked names. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed higher Friday, with the S&P 500 posting its seventh straight gain and its ninth winning week in a row, while Dell Technologies jumped 32.8% after citing strong AI-computing demand. For the week, the Nasdaq rose 2.4% and the S&P 500 gained 1.4%.

SoundHound’s own week was less about a single headline and more about investors re-reading the capital structure. A May 27 filing showed the company had filed a registration statement tied to business-combination securities and a current report covering annual-meeting matters, amended bylaws and an equity distribution agreement for up to $300 million of Class A stock. An at-the-market offering, or ATM, lets a company sell new shares into the market over time rather than all at once.

The company’s last earnings update is still the main operating backdrop. SoundHound reported first-quarter revenue of $44.2 million, up 52% from a year earlier, said it had $216 million in cash and cash equivalents with no debt, and reaffirmed 2026 revenue guidance of $225 million to $260 million. It also used $26.3 million in operating cash in the quarter.

The larger question is LivePerson. SoundHound agreed in April to buy the enterprise conversational-AI company in a stock deal that it valued at $43 million in equity value and an implied $250 million enterprise value. Management said the combined company could have 2027 revenue of at least $350 million to $400 million and a $500 million revenue opportunity from the existing customer base; LivePerson CEO John Sabino said the “artificial boundaries” between “talking” and “typing” are disappearing. SoundHound AI

Chief Executive Keyvan Mohajer told D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria on the May 7 earnings call that LivePerson gives SoundHound a chance to address “financial stability, faster innovation, and faster modernization.” Then came the plainer line investors may care about more: “Of course, we have to execute after that.” SoundHound AI

That is the competitive frame. SoundHound is trying to move beyond voice into a broader customer-service AI stack, where phone, chat, web and messaging systems are converging. Ian Jacobs at Opus Research wrote after the deal that AI in customer experience had moved into a “consolidation phase,” where winners may be defined by who can assemble the more durable platform. Opus Research

The public-market peer read was also supportive. C3.ai rose 5.38% on Friday, while Palantir extended a two-session AI-software rally, a sign that SoundHound’s move was not happening in isolation. Still, SoundHound’s exposure is narrower: voice AI, restaurant and automotive deployments, and the contact-center push after LivePerson.

Analyst targets show the split. Benzinga data lists a consensus price target of $12.44 across 10 analysts, with a high of $20 and a low of $7. The most recent listed calls include D.A. Davidson maintaining a buy rating on April 22, H.C. Wainwright maintaining buy in March, and Piper Sandler reiterating neutral in February.

But the downside case is straightforward. The LivePerson deal still needs LivePerson stockholder approval, regulatory clearances, Nasdaq approval for listing new shares and an effective Form S-4; the merger agreement can be terminated if the deal is not completed by Oct. 21, 2026, with a possible extension to Dec. 5 under certain conditions. Add the possible ATM share supply, and Monday’s test is whether buyers keep rewarding the growth story or shift back to dilution, cash burn and integration risk.

In the week ahead, traders will watch whether SoundHound can hold Friday’s breakout area or gives back part of the two-day jump. For longer-term holders, the cleaner marker is less the next tick and more whether management can turn LivePerson’s customer base into growth without using too much stock to get there.

Roman Perkowski is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Cracow University of Economics, he previously worked in investment research and corporate finance. His coverage helps readers understand the key forces driving global financial markets and emerging industries. Follow Roman Perkowski on Google News.

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