Wondering if Sphere Entertainment is actually worth its lofty share price, or if the hype around the Sphere in Las Vegas has run ahead of fundamentals, you are not alone.
The stock has cooled slightly over the last week with a 0.3% decline, but that comes after a 14.8% climb over the last month and a 103.1% gain year to date, building on a 115.9% return over the past year and an eye catching 345.9% over three years.
Those moves have tracked a wave of attention around the Las Vegas Sphere opening, from headline grabbing concert residencies and viral social media footage to packed event calendars that have put the venue, and the stock, firmly on investors’ radar. At the same time, analysts and investors are debating how much of this buzz will translate into sustainable cash flows and long term value creation for shareholders.
Despite all that excitement, Simply Wall St’s valuation checks give Sphere Entertainment a score of 1/6, suggesting the market may already be pricing in a lot of optimism. Next, we will break down what the main valuation approaches say, and then finish with a more nuanced way to think about what this business might really be worth.
Sphere Entertainment scores just 1/6 on our valuation checks. See what other red flags we found in the full valuation breakdown.
A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model estimates what a business is worth today by projecting its future cash flows and discounting them back to a present value. For Sphere Entertainment, this uses a 2 stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach based on cash flow projections.
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The company is currently burning cash, with last twelve month free cash flow of around $411 Million in the red. Analysts expect this to swing into positive territory over the next few years, with free cash flow projected to reach about $203 Million by 2028. Beyond the explicit analyst horizon, Simply Wall St extrapolates cash flows, with projections stepping up to roughly $311 Million by 2035 as the Sphere concept matures.
Aggregating and discounting these projected cash flows gives an estimated intrinsic value of about $90.70 per share. That implies Sphere Entertainment trades at roughly a 7.0% discount to this DCF value, which suggests the shares look close to fairly valued, with only a modest margin of safety for investors.
Result: ABOUT RIGHT
Sphere Entertainment is fairly valued according to our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), but this can change at a moment’s notice. Track the value in your watchlist or portfolio and be alerted on when to act.
For companies like Sphere Entertainment that are still working toward consistent profitability, the Price to Sales, or P S, ratio is often a more useful yardstick than earnings based metrics. It anchors valuation to actual revenue being generated today, while still reflecting what investors expect from future growth and the risks they see ahead.
In general, faster growing and lower risk businesses can justify a higher P S multiple. Slower, more cyclical or riskier companies tend to trade on lower ratios. Sphere Entertainment currently trades on about 2.77x sales, which is above both the Entertainment industry average of around 1.43x and the peer group average of roughly 2.44x. That premium suggests the market is already paying up for the Sphere concept and its perceived growth runway.
Simply Wall St takes this a step further with its proprietary Fair Ratio, which estimates what P S multiple would be appropriate after weighing factors like earnings growth potential, profit margins, industry dynamics, company size and specific risks. For Sphere Entertainment, the Fair Ratio is about 1.28x, noticeably below the current 2.77x. That gap indicates the shares look rich relative to what would be implied by the company’s fundamentals and risk profile.
Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation, so let’s introduce you to Narratives, which are simply investor created stories that connect what you believe about a company to a financial forecast and, ultimately, to a fair value estimate.
On Simply Wall St, Narratives live in the Community page and make it easy for millions of investors to spell out their assumptions about future revenue, earnings and margins. Investors can then see how those assumptions translate into a Fair Value that they can compare against today’s share price to help inform a decision to buy, hold or sell.
Because Narratives are dynamically updated when new information arrives, such as Sphere Entertainment’s latest earnings, news about new venues or changes to analyst forecasts, they stay relevant as the story evolves rather than locking you into a static view.
For example, one Sphere Entertainment Narrative might focus on the bullish $75 analyst target and strong immersive tech adoption. Another might anchor closer to the $35 bear case and slower earnings ramp. Simply Wall St lets you compare these side by side so you can choose, refine or build the version of the Sphere story that best fits your own expectations.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.