Interparfums (NASDAQ: IPAR) was downgraded by Wall Street Zen from a 'buy' rating to a 'hold' rating in a research note issued to investors on Sunday. The company is a global fragrance company that designs, manufactures, and distributes premium perfume and cosmetic products, operating primarily through licensing agreements with luxury brands like Montblanc, Coach, Jimmy Choo, Van Cleef & Arpels, and Lanvin. The stock has seen various analyst ratings: Zacks Research upgraded it from a 'strong sell' to 'hold', Weiss Ratings reiterated a 'hold (c-)', and Jefferies Financial Group initially rated it 'buy' with a $112 target. BWS Financial set a 'neutral' rating with a $85 target. One analyst rated it 'Strong Buy', three rated it 'Buy', and three rated it 'Hold'. The consensus rating from MarketBeat is 'Moderate Buy' with an average price target of $105.20. Interparfums reported $0.88 EPS for the quarter, beating estimates by $0.10, with revenue of $386.18 million, up 6.8% year-over-year. The company has a market cap of $2.92 billion, a P/E ratio of 17.40, and a beta of 1.25. The stock opened at $91.19, with a 52-week range of $77.21 to $142.61. Financial ratios include a quick ratio of 1.97, current ratio of 2.99, and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.11. Interparfums set FY 2026 guidance at 4.85 EPS. CEO Jean Madar sold 20,000 shares, reducing their stake by 0.28%. Institutional investors hold 55.57% of the stock. The company’s core activities include fragrance creation, brand management, and international logistics.
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