EYES Analyst Ratings
Second Sight Medical Products, Inc. (EYES) operates in the Healthcare sector, specifically the Medical - Devices industry, with a market capitalization near $210.0M, listed on NASDAQ, employing roughly 15 people, carrying a beta of 2.56 to the broader market. As of August 30, 2022, Second Sight Medical Products, Inc. Led by Matthew Pfeffer, public since 2014-11-19.
Recent Upgrades & Downgrades
| Date | Firm | Action | From | To |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 25, 2020 | H.C. Wainwright | maintain | Buy | Buy |
| Nov 25, 2020 | Rodman & Renshaw | maintain | Buy | Buy |
| Nov 25, 2020 | Dougherty & Co. | maintain | Buy | Buy |
| Dec 13, 2019 | Dougherty & Co. | maintain | Buy | Buy |
| Mar 4, 2016 | Rodman & Renshaw | maintain | Buy | Buy |
How to Read EYES Analyst Coverage
Sell-side equity analysts publish three primary outputs: ratings (Strong Buy / Buy / Hold / Sell / Strong Sell, or firm-specific equivalents), price targets, and EPS / revenue estimate revisions. Rating consensus moves slowly relative to price; it reflects 12-month directional conviction rather than near-term momentum. Price targets are more responsive but typically drift behind realized price during sharp moves. The most actionable signal for options traders is a cluster of ratings actions across multiple firms within a short window, which compresses or expands implied volatility on a horizon of days to weeks and shifts the put-call skew toward the directional consensus. The recent-actions table above shows the five most recent firm-level changes; longer histories live behind aggregator sources.
For event-driven options sizing, pair the consensus rating and target distribution with the implied-volatility surface and dealer-positioning view. Aggressive target hikes from multiple firms tend to tighten put skew (downside protection becomes relatively cheaper); aggressive cuts widen put skew. The size of the IV response in the hours after a rating change is visible on the per-ticker volatility skew page and the gamma-exposure page, both of which show how dealer hedging propagates the analyst-driven flow into the listed options chain.
Learn how analyst ratings is reported and how to read the data →