Instacart jumps 14% on strong results as CEO calls grocery competition fears ‘overblown’

Instacart jumps 14% on strong results as CEO calls grocery competition fears ‘overblown’


Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Instacart‘s stock surged more than 14% after the company’s robust results alleviated worries over mounting competitive pressures in the grocery delivery market.

During an earnings call with analysts, CEO Chris Rogers, who took the helm last year, called the concerns “overblown” and said the company monitors threats “extremely closely.”

“There is definitely a market for us here and we feel good about our points of differentiation,” he said.

Instacart is facing an increasingly competitive market as retailers like Amazon and food platforms such as Uber Eats and Doordash aggressively scale in grocery delivery. At the same time, the company is investing in new technology and artificial intelligence tools to drive more customers and businesses to its platform.

Wall Street analysts viewed Instacart’s results as a wave of confidence for those worried about the company’s moat. Analysts at Bernstein called the report a “solid rebuttal” to competitive pressures and AI threats.

“The clean beat-and-raise has been rare this internet earnings cycle and CART stands out from that perspective,” wrote analysts at Barclays.

The San Francisco-based company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter revenue and said gross transaction value (GTV) grew 14%, representing its strongest quarterly growth in three years.

Orders totaled 89.5 million, topping a StreetAccount estimate of 87.8 million.

Instacart also issued an optimistic forecast, calling for GTV in the range of $10.13 billion and $10.28 billion, versus a $9.97 billion estimate from StreetAccount.

The company expects between $280 million and $290 million in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, versus $277 million expected.

Study finds Instacart uses AI pricing tools causing various prices for identical products



Source

Uber ex-CEO Kalanick rebrands latest venture Atoms, expands into mining and transport
Technology

Uber ex-CEO Kalanick rebrands latest venture Atoms, expands into mining and transport

Travis Kalanick, chief executive officer of City Storage Systems (CSS) during the Future Investment Initiative (FII) Institute Priority conference in Miami, Florida, US, on Friday, Feb. 21, 2025. Zak Bennett | Bloomberg | Getty Images Uber founder and ex-CEO Travis Kalanick has renamed his latest venture as Atoms and said on Friday that he’s expanding […]

Read More
AI agents could easily send college grad unemployment over 30%, ServiceNow CEO says
Technology

AI agents could easily send college grad unemployment over 30%, ServiceNow CEO says

Artificial intelligence adoption could lead to significant job struggles for entry-level workers as companies boost productivity, according to ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott. McDermott told “Squawk on the Street” on Friday that unemployment for new college graduates “could easily go into the mid-30s in the next couple of years.” “So much of the work is going […]

Read More
Nvidia’s GTC will mark an AI chip pivot. Here’s why the CPU is taking center stage
Technology

Nvidia’s GTC will mark an AI chip pivot. Here’s why the CPU is taking center stage

Nvidia showed CNBC its latest Vera CPU at its Santa Clara, California, headquarters on Feb. 13, 2026. Marc Ganley | CNBC Nvidia‘s graphics processing units have been the hottest-selling chips for years, but the sudden advent of agentic artificial intelligence has brought on a renaissance for its more modest host chip, the central processing unit. […]

Read More