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, assigning a Buy recommendation to the pharmaceutical giant. If you’re trying to understand what this means for AZN investors, here’s what the data reveals about where this stock might be heading.
Price Target Signals Modest But Meaningful Upside for AZN
As of mid-January 2026, analyst consensus points to an average one-year price target of $97.79 per share for AZN. This represents a 4.89% increase from the stock’s recent closing price of $93.23. Individual forecasts range from a conservative $44.29 to an optimistic $128.11, reflecting diverse perspectives on AstraZeneca’s near-term trajectory. On the revenue front, projections indicate annual sales of approximately $53.2 billion, though this represents an 8.45% decline from previous periods. The projected non-GAAP earnings per share stands at $11.81.
Institutional Interest in AZN Shows Nuanced Patterns
A total of 1,763 funds and institutions currently hold positions in AZN, marking a notable increase of 32 shareholders over the last quarter—a 1.85% gain in investor participation. However, the picture becomes more complex when examining portfolio weighting: the average allocation to AZN among all institutional funds sits at 0.42%, up 4.92% quarter-over-quarter. Yet institutional investors collectively trimmed their AZN holdings by 0.96% in the past three months, now controlling approximately 638.2 million shares. The options market adds another dimension—AZN’s put/call ratio of 1.00 suggests a balanced but cautiously bearish perspective among options traders.
How Major Investors Are Reshaping Their AZN Positions
The detailed breakdown of top institutional holders reveals mixed conviction levels. T. Rowe Price Associates, one of the largest AZN stakeholders, currently owns 49.1 million shares but trimmed this position by 5.74% from its previous filing. The firm simultaneously reduced its portfolio allocation to AZN by 1.94% over the quarter.
Primecap Management holds 39.9 million AZN shares, down 3.37% from prior holdings of 41.2 million. Interestingly, despite the absolute share reduction, the firm actually increased its relative portfolio weighting in AZN by 2.65%, suggesting a deliberate rebalancing strategy rather than outright pessimism.
Bank of America presents a contrasting picture, boosting its AZN stake to 32.6 million shares from 31.2 million previously—a 4.48% increase. The institution also grew its portfolio allocation to AZN by 6.54%, signaling renewed confidence in the position.
Wellington Management Group holds approximately 32.3 million AZN shares, representing a 6.31% decrease from its prior filing, with a modest 0.40% reduction in portfolio weighting. Meanwhile, the Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund added to its AZN position, acquiring 26.7 million shares compared to 25.5 million earlier, reflecting a 4.52% increase, though the fund reduced its overall allocation by 4.80%.
What This Means for AZN: Weighing the Evidence
Citigroup’s bullish stance on AZN aligns with analyst consensus showing modest upside potential. Yet the mixed signals from institutional investors—some trimming positions while others increase allocations—suggest the market remains uncertain about near-term catalysts. The slightly bearish options sentiment combined with revenue headwinds worth noting. For investors trying to decide on AZN, the current risk-reward profile appears balanced: reasonable upside exists, but so do legitimate concerns about pharma industry dynamics and AZN’s own revenue pressures.