Equinix, Inc. (EQIX) Stock Price, News, Quote & History - Yahoo Finance (original) (raw)
NasdaqGS - Nasdaq Real Time Price USD
Equinix, Inc. (EQIX)
1,062.37 -17.31 (-1.60%)
As of 2:37:20 PM EDT. Market Open.
- Previous Close 1,079.68
- Open 1,077.44
- Bid 1,057.09 x 200
- Ask 1,067.08 x 100
- Day's Range 1,055.20 - 1,077.44
- 52 Week Range 710.52 - 1,128.68
- Volume 175,078
- Avg. Volume 601,256
- Market Cap (intraday) 104.775B
- Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.00
- PE Ratio (TTM) 73.42
- EPS (TTM) 14.47
- Earnings Date (est.) Jul 29, 2026
- Forward Dividend & Yield 19.70 (1.82%)
- Ex-Dividend Date May 20, 2026
- 1y Target Est 1,197.11
Trailing total returns as of 5/15/2026, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is S&P 500 (^GSPC) .
YTD Return
1-Year Return
3-Year Return
5-Year Return
Earnings Per Share
Revenue vs. Earnings
Analyst Price Targets
Analyst Recommendations
- Strong Buy
- Buy
- Hold
- Underperform
- Sell
Latest Rating
Date 5/7/2026
Analyst Mizuho
Rating Action Maintains
Rating Outperform
Price Action Raises
Price Target 1165 -> 1200
Valuation Measures
As of 5/8/2026
- Market Cap
105.73B - Enterprise Value
126.02B - Trailing P/E
74.14 - Forward P/E
60.24 - PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
3.52 - Price/Sales (ttm)
11.17 - Price/Book (mrq)
7.39 - Enterprise Value/Revenue
13.35 - Enterprise Value/EBITDA
29.51
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
- Profit Margin
14.93% - Return on Assets (ttm)
3.49% - Return on Equity (ttm)
10.06% - Revenue (ttm)
9.53B - Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
1.42B - Diluted EPS (ttm)
14.47
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
- Total Cash (mrq)
1.36B - Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
162.96% - Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
2.73B
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Fair Value
Dividend Score
Hiring Score
Insider Sentiment Score
Raising target price to $1170
Equinix is a real estate investment trust focusing on interconnected data centers. It develops data center platforms and architecture for businesses involved in cloud software, IT, financial services, and mobile services. The company offers secure networks and cloud-neutral data platforms and is leveraged to the secular transition away from on-premises data centers to cloud colocation centers. The company can face FX pressure. About 38% of 2025 revenues were in U.S. dollars. At the beginning of 2026, the company had over 500,000 global interconnections and just over 270 data centers on six continents. About 109 data centers are in the U.S., and there are 23 global xScale facilities. The company topped 9.2billioninrevenuesin2025,ofwhich459.2 billion in revenues in 2025, of which 45% were from operations in the Americas and 70% were from global colocation. As of the beginning of 2026, owned assets account for about 70% of recurring revenue. The company currently has robust expansion plans to meet AI demand and could double its data center capacity by 2029. EQIX shares are a component of the S&P 500. The current market cap is about 9.2billioninrevenuesin2025,ofwhich45106 billion.
Sector Leadership Realigns in an Uncertain Period April was an 'average year'
Sector Leadership Realigns in an Uncertain Period April was an 'average year' for stocks. That means, of course, it was a spectacular month. The S&P 500 rose 10.4% in April, in line with the average 10.6% full-year gain on the index since 1980. So far, May has carried that momentum forward, advancing 2.6% as of the 5/8/26 close. Uneasy truces hold (for the most part) between the U.S. and Iran and between Israel and Lebanon. With the White House rejecting Iran's response to the latest U.S. peace proposal, the truces look increasingly frayed as sporadic attacks from both sides intensify. But, so far, that has not stopped the stock market. The first-quarter 2026 U.S. stock market continued the pattern of the second half of 2025, in that leadership had rotated away from growth and was dispersed across defensive (Consumer Staples), cyclical (Industrial), interest-rate-sensitive (Utilities, Real Estate), and inflation hedges (Energy, Materials). With the second quarter not quite halfway done, the growth sectors of Information Technology, Consumer Discretionary, and Communication Services have come roaring back. Growth Sectors Rallying in 2Q26 For 2Q26 to date, the S&P 500 has rocketed higher by 13%. That eye-popping number actually understates performances from some of the sector and industry leaders. The Information Technology sector is up 31% in 2Q26 to date. That is not far off the 36% gain for Energy in 1Q26 -- but IT has jumped more than 30% in less than half a quarter. Semiconductors have been in the lead, with the SOX index rising over 35% in the past month and rising over 50% in the second quarter to date. Software, badly beaten up in 4Q25 and 1Q26, is up 17% in 2Q26 to date. The next-best sector in 2Q26 has been Consumer Discretionary, which is up just over 10% as of 5/8/26. Amazon, which dominates the retail stocks in this sector, has been surging as AWS generates accelerating growth and margin expansion on AI momentum with Anthropic, OpenAI, and others. The other growth sector, Communication Services, has had a more-muted performance but still has gained 5.5% in 2Q26. Four stocks dominate this sector: Alphabet and Meta Platforms on the social media side, and Verizon and AT&T on the legacy telecom side. Alphabet has been strong thanks to successful AI initiatives, but Meta Platforms has struggled with its AI bets. The big telcos are delivering solid total return with their high dividends, but are not much associated with the AI revolution. The rotation winners of 3Q25 through 1Q26 have not rolled over; in fact, the overall market has been strong enough in 2Q26 to keep most sectors moving forward. Real Estate, which struggled in recent years as high interest rates limit new property investments, is up about 8% in 2Q26. The overall interest-rate environment has not improved, but pent-up demand is helping leasing activity. Other mid-single-digit gainers in 2Q26 include Industrials (up 7%), Materials (up 5%), Financial (up 4%), and Consumer Staples (up 2%). Sectors that are negative so far in 2Q26 include Healthcare (down 2%), Utilities (down 3%), and Energy (down 9%). Healthcare came into 2026 riding a wave of optimism as President Trump signed deals designed to bring down prices and hopefully stimulate business. But strained consumers are foregoing elective medical procedures and are even skipping going to the doctor. Utilities have been a winning sector since the Fed began its rate-cutting cycle over two years ago. As the outlook dims for further fed rate cuts, profit-taking in income stocks may be funding rotation back into AI and semiconductor names. Energy soared 36% in 1Q26, which included a 20% surge in January and February before the first shots were fired in Iran. Energy is down about 9% in 2Q26. While oil and derivatives prices remain near multi-year highs, they have bounced around on optimism that a lasting truce can be reached and the Strait of Hormuz can be reopened. Even if the war ends soon, oil prices are likely to remain elevated for months as supply and demand gradually normalize. Investors betting on a quick resolution to the war and an oil-price drop are being accused of replacing forecasting with 'wishcasting.' If oil prices do not come down rapidly, the market is assuming energy prices have reached their highs for the year. Year-to-Date Sector Map Also Shifts While April and May have been go-go for growth, the full-year sector performance map also captures a first quarter in which growth was back on its heels. The three growth sectors represent over 50% of S&P 500 sector weight -- and when they are all down, the overall market tends to be down. The S&P 500 declined 4.6% in 1Q26. With the second-quarter surge, the index was up 8.1% for the year to date as of the 5/8/26 close. Among the 11 sectors in the S&P 500, two sectors are clearly down for the 2026 year-to-date and one is bobbing right around breakeven. Communication Services is down less than half a percentage point for 2026 as it follows a 6% first-quarter decline with a 5.5% second-quarter gain. The Financial sector appreciated in mid- to high-single-digit percentages in 2025 and 20204 as net interest margins widened and as the environment for fee-based businesses gradually improved. The sector is down 5% in 2026 to date on fears (not yet realized) that rising inflation will slow load demand and worsen an already depressed housing market. The Healthcare sector has been struggling and getting smaller in S&P sector weight in recent years. In addition to a slowing in consumer medical-procedure utilization, the pipeline of promising new drug candidates is full of GLP-1 variations, but somewhat sparse otherwise. Sectors that are up in single-digit percentages in 2026 to date, in ascending order, include Consumer Discretionary (up 1%), Utilities (up 4%), Industrial (up 6%), Consumer Staples (up 8%), and Real Estate (up 9%). Three sectors are up in double digits for the year to date. In ascending order, these are Information Technology (up 19%), Materials (up 20%), and Energy (up 24%). Energy and Materials carried significant momentum from 1Q26, whereas Information Technology has been the comeback kid after ending 1Q26 down 9%. Conclusion The stock market has been news-driven in 2026 -- particularly since the war with Iran began. At times, it can seem like stock selection is all 'Hormuz, Hormuz, Hormuz' vs. 'AI, AI, AI.' That makes it hard to predict which sectors will lead as the trading year progresses. But stocks across a range of sectors have been working higher on solid fundamentals that have little to do with events in the Middle East. The calendar 2026 first-quarter earnings season, which is now winding down, has so far featured 25%-plus EPS growth. That's the best growth since the quarters coming out of COVID-19 economic disruption. Putting aside huge one-time gains from three of the 'Magnificent Seven' companies, earnings for calendar 1Q26 have featured notable gross-margin improvement on company efficiencies and supply-chain normalization. Earnings have also benefited from revenue growth that has exceeded any inflation impacts. Consumer spending has rarely been so lopsided, with strains on lower-income consumers worsening. The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for May 20206 was 48.2% -- the lowest reading in the 70-year-plus history of this series. For now, upper-tier consumers are keeping overall consumer spending healthy, which is helping keep employment trends positive. These positive conditions could melt away if the situation in Iran evolves into a permanent stasis in which the Strait of Hormuz remains closed or only partly open and hostilities continue at a low level. Economic shocks have a lagged effect, and oil price inflation will take one or more quarters to ripple fully through consumer and business prices. The grinding effects of worsening inflation could restrain spending by even well-to-do Americans. In the stock market, some of the recent sector and industry momentum, particularly in semiconductors, does not appear sustainable. We will continue to monitor the dynamic situation in Iran, while also keeping an eye on all parts of the economy.
Daily – Vickers Top Buyers & Sellers for 05/08/2026
The Vickers Top Buyers & Sellers is a daily report that identifies the five companies the largest insider purchase transactions based on the dollar value of the transactions as well as the five companies the largest insider sales transactions based on the dollar value of the transactions.
Iran War Impacts Inflation
Wall Street got important and timely news on inflation last week, first as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) was released on Friday. The report signaled that the Iran War is starting to impact prices and measured pricing trends through March. Here, the news was as expected: the annualized headline number of 3.3% jumped 90 basis points month over month and the core rate was essentially steady at 2.6%. The overall consumer-pricing environment included a 10.9% month-over-month surge in energy prices, with gasoline soaring 21% and fuel oil jumping 31%. This is what happens when the price of a barrel of oil jumps from 55to55 to 55to100. Other pricing categories were less volatile (food was up at a 2.7% rate and shelter increased at a 3.0% rate), but it likely is only a matter of time before high energy prices make an impact. Also released last week was the PCE Price Index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge. PCE prices were steady, with the overall index at 2.8% and the ex-food and energy index at 3.0%. But due to the government shutdown last year, the data analyzed was through February -- before the bombing began. The next versions of the report likely will reflect renewed pricing pressure. While the war is now in a ceasefire phase, there is no certainty that hostilities are over. Crude oil near $100 is still much closer to the 52-week high than the 52-week low, and should remain elevated for months as the global energy supply chain is relinked. As a new Federal Reserve chairman prepares to take charge later this spring, high inflation reports may delay any downward movement in the fed funds rate until later in 2026.