Stock Markets February 4, 2026

Bank of America Sees Upside in Omnicell on New Cabinet Cycle; Upgrades to Buy

Analyst firm lifts price target, flags multi-year connected-device revenue and margin upside tied to Titan XT rollout

By Priya Menon
Bank of America Sees Upside in Omnicell on New Cabinet Cycle; Upgrades to Buy

Bank of America upgraded Omnicell to Buy from Neutral and raised its price target to $70 from $53, arguing the company’s next-generation automated dispensing cabinet - Titan XT - could catalyze a multi-year acceleration in connected-device revenue that consensus does not currently reflect. Shipments are slated to begin in the second half of 2026, a transition year that may show only modest early contributions, but the bank projects more than $900 million in Titan XT-related revenue through 2029 and a total addressable opportunity around $2.5 billion.

Key Points

  • Bank of America upgraded Omnicell to Buy and raised its price target to $70 from $53, citing a new cabinet refresh cycle.
  • Titan XT shipments are expected to begin in the second half of 2026, with the bank estimating more than $900 million in revenue tied to the product through 2029 and a total addressable opportunity of about $2.5 billion.
  • The bank projects connected-device revenue to reaccelerate to mid-teens growth and sees more than 3 percentage points of upside to consensus EBITDA margins by 2028; implications primarily affect hospital automation, medical device manufacturing, and healthcare IT sectors.

Bank of America moved Omnicell to a Buy rating from Neutral, citing the potential for a major product refresh to lift revenue and margins over several years. The bank also lifted its price objective to $70 from $53, pointing to what it expects to be a sustained upgrade cycle as hospitals replace older automated dispensing cabinets on an eight- to 10-year replacement cadence.

The firm highlighted Omnicell’s next-generation automated dispensing cabinet, called Titan XT, as the company’s first meaningful cabinet refresh since 2017. Bank of America said that Titan XT could prompt a multi-year acceleration in connected-device sales that is not captured in current street forecasts.

According to the bank’s analysis, Titan XT shipments are expected to begin in the second half of 2026, which it views as a transition year. The bank cautioned that initial guidance may only show modest revenue contributions late in 2026, and it advised investors to treat any short-term weakness as an entry opportunity given the longer-term trajectory.

On a longer horizon, Bank of America quantified the opportunity, estimating Titan XT could account for more than $900 million in revenue through 2029. That projection rests on upgrades of cabinets originally installed between 2017 and 2020, and the bank placed the total addressable market for the refresh at roughly $2.5 billion.

The bank contrasted its outlook with prevailing consensus assumptions, saying that the Street currently models connected-device revenue growth of just 3% to 4% through 2028. Bank of America expects connected-device revenue growth to reaccelerate to mid-teens rates - a materially faster pace than the consensus view and more in line with growth seen during the prior upgrade cycle.

Bank of America also saw room for margin expansion as the product cycle matures. The firm estimated more than 3 percentage points of upside to consensus EBITDA margins by 2028, driven by higher incremental margins on new products and a rising share of recurring software revenue from Omnicell’s OmniSphere platform.

Valuation was another element of the bank’s bullish case. Omnicell shares, the bank noted, trade at under 13 times what it described as near-trough 2026 EBITDA - below the company’s 10-year average multiple of about 16 times. The bank argued that the greater mix of recurring revenue today could support additional multiple expansion relative to the prior cycle.


Analysis context - The bank’s upgrade and target raise are driven by a combination of product-cycle timing, modeled revenue upside concentrated in connected devices, and potential margin improvement as a greater share of revenues convert to recurring software and higher-margin new-product sales.

Risks

  • Near-term contribution risk - Bank of America warned that initial guidance may show only modest Titan XT revenue contributions in late 2026, creating potential near-term volatility for Omnicell’s reported results; this affects investors and equity markets tracking healthcare equipment makers.
  • Transition-year timing risk - With shipments slated to start in the second half of 2026, 2026 is characterized as a transition year, which could lead to uneven revenue recognition and execution sensitivity in hospital automation and medical supply chains.
  • Forecast uncertainty - Current consensus models low connected-device growth (3% to 4% through 2028); divergence between market expectations and the bank’s mid-teens growth assumption introduces forecasting uncertainty for equity analysts and healthcare technology investors.

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