Behind the Numbers: What Two Big Firms Really Think About RoboSense’s Future
Hong KongSat Apr 11 2026
Two large investment houses have just kept their thumbs up for RoboSense, a company building sensors used in self-driving cars. Guosheng and DBS both say “Buy, ” though they don’t quite agree on the price you should pay. Guosheng’s target is HK$53; DBS sticks at HK$50. The spread shows experts still differ on how to value a firm that hasn’t yet turned a profit but is growing fast.
RoboSense’s latest quarter looks good on paper: revenue jumped from HK$367 million last year to HK$455 million now. That’s a healthy rise, about 24 percent in one year. Yet the balance sheet tells another story—the company lost HK$51 million in the last three months, better than the HK$138 million loss from the same period a year ago, but still a loss. Investors are asked to believe the red ink will disappear even as sales climb. So far, the proof isn’t in the pudding.
The divergence in price targets hints at a split personality in the analyst world. Guosheng sees more upside, placing its bet $3 above the rival house. Price targets are educated guesses, not guarantees, so the HK$3 gap reminds everyone that spreadsheets alone can’t predict tomorrow’s stock price.
Behind the ticker 2498, the company is racing to perfect lidar sensors that let robots “see” the road. Car makers are snapping them up, yet every new order pushes costs higher before scale kicks in. It’s classic high-growth math: burn cash now, sell later. The market approves by pushing the stock up, but approval could flip if growth slows or if another firm shows a cheaper path to the same technology.
https://localnews.ai/article/behind-the-numbers-what-two-big-firms-really-think-about-robosenses-future-635b8c4d
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