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Here's what Wall Street is saying after Google's big hardware event

Avery Hartmans   

Here's what Wall Street is saying after Google's big hardware event
Tech3 min read

Sundar Pichai

Reuters/Stephen Lam

Google CEO Sundar Pichai.

Wall Street was impressed by Tuesday's big Google event, which unveiled new hardware like the Pixel phone and the Google Home device, and launched the company's new artificial intelligence-powered Assistant onto several new devices.

The company's stock has remained stable since then - it's up slightly, about 0.46% as of 10 a.m. Wednesday - but analysts say the new products are a good sign for Google, despite the fact that Google appears to be following in the footsteps of other more accomplished hardware companies like Apple and Amazon.

Here's what Wall Street analysts had to say:

Macquarie

Macquarie remains bullish on Google, affirming its "outperform" rating and setting a price target of $975. It describes Google's new products as "me too" - meaning it's showing up to the game a bit late, after Apple has already mastered the smartphone and Amazon has dominated the AI-powered device market with Alexa and the Echo.

While Macquarie thinks Google's voice recognition capabilities could be what sets the Assistant and Google Home apart from the competition, it's taking a conservative view on the new products:

GOOG's past attempts at hardware (Nexus, Chromebooks, Glass, Nest, etc...) have not amounted to much and given their track record, we are not going to give them the benefit of the doubt on any hardware efforts until we see otherwise. The bottom line is the VR and AI capabilities shown are interesting but we don't see much hardware here that's particularly innovative versus what's currently in the market. We think this is particularly disappointing given GOOG's focus on R&D, virtually unlimited resources and unique capabilities.

Google Products october 4 2016 event

Skye Gould/Business Insider

All the new products unveiled at Google's Oct. 4 event.

Jefferies

According to Jefferies, Google just introduced "some of its most interesting hardware devices yet." Jefferies' price target is on the higher end - $1,000 - and it's maintaining a "buy" rating.

Perhaps most interestingly, Jefferies is taking a very bullish stance on Google Home. Analysts estimated the market for virtual assistants could reach $2.1 billion by 2017, and Jefferies says Google Home has the potential to add $500 million in revenue for Google by then.

Baird Equity Research

Baird set one of the more conservative price targets at $900 and rates Google's stock at "outperform." But Baird is betting most on machine learning and artificial intelligence as the key to Google's success down the line.

Here's what Baird's analysts wrote:

As AI/Machine Learning emerge as the next "computing wave," Google's virtual assistant sits at the core of both Pixel and Home, and showcase the focus at the intersection of hardware and software. We continue to believe that Google's ML/AI capabilities are a key competitive differentiator, often overlooked by investors.

Though Baird describes AI as still in the "early innings," it says Google's machine learning capabilities can only get better - Baird expects voice recognition, machine translation, and image recognition to vastly improve over time.

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