SoundHound AI's stock has fallen 72% from its peak, yet the company's enterprise business is growing — a tension that defines the gap between AI hype and commercial reality.
SoundHound AI's stock has fallen 72% from its peak, yet the company's enterprise business is growing — a tension that defines the gap between AI hype and commercial reality.

SoundHound AI's stock has fallen 72% from its peak, yet the company's enterprise business is growing — a tension that defines the gap between AI hype and commercial reality.
SoundHound AI Inc. (NASDAQ: SOUN) has lost nearly three-quarters of its market value since December 2024, when shares traded above $20. The stock now sits at roughly $3 billion in market capitalization, down 29.4% year to date and 25.7% over the past 12 months. The decline reflects a broader rotation away from unprofitable AI names, even as the company's underlying business continues to expand.
"The pullback is about valuation compression, not a broken story," said Alex Nguyen, enterprise AI analyst at Edgen. "SoundHound is delivering real revenue growth and enterprise wins, but the market is punishing any AI company that isn't generating positive free cash flow."
Revenue rose 52% year over year to $44.20 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2026, marking the company's sixth consecutive earnings beat. Organic growth in its auto and IoT AI segment accelerated to 88%. The company's OASYS agentic AI platform, which lets businesses deploy fleets of self-improving AI agents, has already delivered measurable results: one Fortune 100 client reported $10 million in quarterly cost savings from the system.
The Enterprise Case vs. The Market's Patience
SoundHound's customer roster spans automotive, quick-service restaurants, financial services, and consumer electronics. Stellantis, Panda Express, IHOP, Jersey Mike's, Casey's, BNP Paribas, and Walmart's ONN TV brand all use its voice AI technology. The company has spent 20 years collecting voice interaction data to train its models, a moat that competitors like Google cannot easily replicate without similar deployment scale.
Yet profitability remains distant. SoundHound reported an adjusted net loss of $26 million in Q1 2026 and negative free cash flow of $113 million on a trailing-12-month basis. The company projects full-year 2026 revenue between $225 million and $260 million — impressive growth from a $155 million base, but still far from covering operating expenses.
The company is also mid-acquisition. SoundHound agreed to buy LivePerson for $43 million in equity, a deal expected to close in the second half of 2026. LivePerson generated $243 million in revenue in 2025 but lost $67 million. SoundHound projects LivePerson will contribute $100 million in revenue by 2027. An active acquirer is harder to acquire itself, but once the integration is complete, the combined entity would have a $500 million revenue opportunity — and a cleaner profile for any strategic buyer.
The $47 Billion Prize and the Competition Problem
The voice AI market is projected to reach $47 billion by 2034, growing at roughly 35% annually, according to Market.us. SoundHound offers the purest public-market exposure to that opportunity. But the same growth trajectory has attracted Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL), whose Google Assistant and Gemini models compete directly for enterprise voice contracts. Google can cross-subsidize its AI offerings with $90 billion in annual advertising profit; SoundHound cannot.
SoundHound shares trade at roughly 12x forward revenue, a discount to the 20x-plus multiples AI software peers commanded during the 2024 rally. The valuation implies the market is pricing in execution risk on the LivePerson integration and skepticism about the timeline to profitability. If SoundHound delivers on its 2027 revenue targets and narrows its losses, the current price could represent an entry point. If the LivePerson deal proves distracting or the competitive pressure from Google intensifies, the stock may remain under pressure until the fundamentals catch up to the narrative.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.