AppLovin Stock: 5 Straight Red Days, Down 19%

APP: AppLovin logo
APP
AppLovin

A five-day slide has erased significant market value from this software platform, raising questions that its underlying fundamentals complicate.

AppLovin (APP) Corporation engages in building a software-based platform for mobile app developers to enhance the marketing and monetization of their apps. The stock has now moved lower for 5 consecutive trading days, a slide that has erased about $34 Bil from its market value.

The cumulative loss over this 5-day streak is 18.6%, leaving the company’s market value at about $149 Bil.

Photo by wynpnt on Pixabay

APP Versus The S&P 500, Streak And Beyond

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Here is how APP stock stacks up against the S&P 500 over the streak and the periods around it:

Return Period APP S&P 500
1D -12.6% -0.8%
5D (Current Streak) -18.6% -0.3%
1M (21D) -10.2% 3.4%
3M (63D) 13.2% 10.2%
YTD 2026 -34.3% 9.8%
2025 108.1% 16.4%
2024 712.6% 23.3%
2023 278.4% 24.2%

The stock’s fundamentals contrast with its recent price action.

AppLovin’s recent performance is largely its own, as the S&P 500 returned -0.3% over the same period. The company’s metrics appear strong against market medians, with revenue over the last twelve months growing 66.4% versus an S&P 500 median of 7.5%. Its operating margin is 77.1%, far exceeding the S&P 500 median of 18.4%.

The market may be weighing this performance against the stock’s valuation. APP trades at a price-to-earnings multiple of 37.7, compared to the S&P 500 median of 24.5. For context, just 24 S&P 500 stocks are on losing streaks of 3 days or more, while 83 are on winning streaks.

A streak is a signal to re-evaluate, not a command to act.

A persistent price move in one direction is information. It tells you where market momentum and attention are currently focused, but it is not an instruction. A streak does not, by itself, mean a stock is a buy or a sell.

The disciplined response is to use the new price as a prompt to check the business. The data here allows for a first look at that comparison: a company with high growth and margins is now trading at a lower price. The question is whether that price better reflects its value.

A slide like this always poses the same follow-up: which marked-down stocks are actually worth buying? Our Buy the Dip screen runs that test every day, flagging beaten-down names whose fundamentals still hold up.

Those watching the group rather than this one name have another route: a software ETF like IGV owns the whole group. That way no single company’s next surprise decides the outcome.

A Losing Streak Shows You The Exposure You Already Had

Watching one stock fall day after day is what concentration feels like in real time: on a small position it is noise, on a large one it is your net worth bleeding. And unwinding an oversized position even after a slide still means a tax bill on the gains that remain. There is a way to put a floor under the position and exit it tax-efficiently.