Snowflake Inc. (NYSE:SNOW) stock is trading lower on Wednesday. The decline reflects a natural cooling-off period for the cloud data analytics provider following a rapid short-term rally, rather than a single catastrophic catalyst.
• Snowflake stock is among today’s weakest performers. What’s weighing on SNOW shares?
Traders are bracing for heightened volatility ahead of Snowflake’s first quarter of fiscal 2027 earnings report, scheduled for release on May 27.
The stock surged 12.46% from $150.76 last Thursday to $169.55 on Tuesday, prompting some near-term profit-taking.
Analysts estimate Snowflake will post earnings per share of 14 cents on quarterly revenue of $1.32 billion. Notably, the company carries strong fundamental momentum into the print, having beaten consensus EPS estimates for seven consecutive quarters.
Despite the Wednesday dip, Wall Street sentiment remains highly optimistic. On Tuesday, Citizens analyst Patrick Walravens reiterated Snowflake with a Market Outperform rating and maintained a $325 price target, signaling significant long-term upside.
Snowflake is still in a longer-term downtrend, trading 18.8% below its 200-day SMA ($203.31) and 5.1% below its 100-day SMA ($173.87), even after a recent bounce.
At the same time, it's 10.8% above its 20-day SMA ($148.87) and 7.4% above its 50-day SMA ($153.59), which frames the current action as a rebound inside a bigger bearish structure.
The moving-average backdrop remains heavy: the 20-day SMA is below the 50-day SMA, and the 50-day SMA is below the 200-day SMA — the death cross that formed in February.
SNOW Price Action: Snowflake shares were down 3.15% at $164.21 at the time of publication on Wednesday, according to Benzinga Pro.
Over the past month, Snowflake has gained about 9.15% versus a 4.5% rise in the S&P 500 and is down roughly 25% year-to-date compared to the index’s 8% gain.
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