Duolingo stock edged higher Monday as falling oil prices lifted market sentiment across the board. The move had little to do with anything Duolingo-specific — it was more of a rising tide lifting all boats.
U.S. crude fell 4% to $94.75 a barrel after concerns over a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz began to ease. That helped push the S&P 500 up 1.2%, on track for its best single-day gain in five weeks. The Dow and Nasdaq also climbed.
DUOL initially popped around 3% before cooling slightly, ending the session at $101.43 — up 3.1% from its previous close.
Just four days ago, the stock dropped 3.2% as investors reacted to escalating U.S.-Israeli military action against Iran. That conflict triggered an oil price spike, raised stagflation fears, and prompted Goldman Sachs to cut its U.S. growth outlook, citing a 25% chance of recession over the next year.
Monday’s session reversed some of that damage, but the bigger picture for DUOL remains rough.
The stock is down 42.5% since January 1 and sits 81.2% below its 52-week high of $540.68, which it hit in May 2025. An investor who put $1,000 into DUOL at its July 2021 IPO would now be holding roughly $730.
Despite the price decline, a bullish investment thesis circulating on Substack argues the market has mispriced Duolingo. The core argument: investors are overestimating the threat from AI and treating short-term growth slowdown as permanent structural decline.
The bull case points to strong fundamentals. Since its IPO, daily active users have grown from 10.1 million to 52.7 million — a 51% compound annual growth rate. Paid subscribers went from 2.5 million to 12.2 million (49% CAGR). Revenue climbed from $251 million to over $1 billion (43% CAGR). Free cash flow margins expanded from 5% to 35%.
At current prices, DUOL trades at roughly 3x forward revenue with a 10% free cash flow yield and over $1 billion in net cash on the balance sheet. Annual free cash flow stands at approximately $360 million.
The company announced a $400 million share repurchase program for 2026.
Management has also been investing in product expansion — chess, music, and math learning verticals — which bulls argue reduces dependency on core language learning and lowers AI disruption risk.
The argument is that Duolingo’s behavioral engagement mechanics — habit loops, gamified accountability, structured progression — are hard to replicate with generic AI tools. With 133 million monthly active users and over a decade of proprietary learning data, the company has infrastructure that newer entrants don’t.
Recent growth moderation, according to the thesis, is intentional as management invests ahead of an expected MAU acceleration in 2027–2028.
As of the end of Q4 2025, 51 hedge fund portfolios held DUOL, up from 50 in the previous quarter.
The post Duolingo (DUOL) Stock Rises 3% After Brutal Start to 2026 — Is it a Buy? appeared first on CoinCentral.