Goldman Sachs kicked off coverage of Twilio (TWLO) with a Buy rating and a $300 price target on Wednesday, sending the stock up as much as 5.1% in premarket trading. That target represents 63% upside from the prior session’s close of $184.04.
Twilio Inc., TWLO
Analyst Callie Valenti authored the note, pointing to Twilio’s role as communications infrastructure for the growing wave of agentic AI developers. The argument is straightforward: AI agents still need to reach end users, and Twilio is the plumbing.
The data backs that up. At Twilio’s 2025 investor day, the company disclosed that 50% of the Forbes 50 AI startups were paying customers as of September 30, 2024. That’s not a small sample.
That AI tailwind is already moving the needle in Twilio’s financials. The self-service business grew 28% year over year in Q4 2025, while the Voice business grew 20% year over year in Q1 2026.
Q1 2026 overall revenue grew 20% year over year, and earnings per share beat consensus by roughly 50%. Twilio also raised its full-year 2026 guidance following those results.
Goldman’s note flags three things investors will watch: whether gross profit growth continues to accelerate, how gross margins trend, and whether the current valuation — already stretched versus history — can still offer positive risk/reward.
The stock didn’t hold its premarket gains through the session, though. It slipped back as investors digested the note’s framing around margins. Goldman’s message was that higher-margin products are the path to profit expansion — and the market tends to read that as “not there yet.”
Goldman wasn’t arriving alone to the Twilio bull camp. Rosenblatt held a Buy with a $230 target as recently as June 18. Tigress Financial raised its target to $255 from $170 in mid-June. Oppenheimer lifted its target to $235 from $200 in May.
That string of upward revisions had already built a positive backdrop before Goldman’s note landed.
The broader market wasn’t helping the mood Wednesday. The S&P 500 was down 1.4% and the Nasdaq off 2.2%, putting pressure across tech. Twilio’s stock-specific catalyst was strong enough to fight that current, at least in the premarket.
Twilio carries a market cap of around $27.87 billion and is up roughly 29% year to date heading into Wednesday’s session.
The stock’s technical sentiment signal is listed as Strong Buy, with average daily trading volume around 2.7 million.
Pass-through carrier costs remain a watch item. If revenue growth slows, thin margins leave limited room for error — which is part of why Goldman’s margin commentary rattled the market even alongside a Buy.
The intraday price as of mid-session was $191.22, up $7.18 or 3.90% from the prior close.
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