TradingKey - Allbirds surged 600% after announcing a full pivot to GPU leasing as NewBird AI. Shares pulled back 30% the next day. Key support $10, targets $13.30 and $15.90.
Allbirds, trading on NASDAQ under the ticker BIRD, just about went off the charts in a single session on April 15. Its stock price skyrocketed from $2.49 to a high of $24 - that's a whopping over 600% - after the company dropped its shoe business entirely and rebranded as NewBird AI, an AI compute company that spins its focus on leasing out high-performance GPUs
By the 16th of April, a lot of that euphoria had already started to wear off. The stock had given back anywhere between 25% to 36% of those gains, now trading around the $10-$12 mark. The question is, has Allbirds actually got something to back up all this or are they just the latest group of struggling companies that slaps an 'AI' label on the side and hope the market doesn't start to poke too many holes in their story.
The company's pivot is quite the dramatic one. Allbirds was the brand that used to flog wool sneakers to the well-to-do Silicon Valley types, and back in 2021 their IPO took them to a $4 billion valuation - briefly, anyway. However come late March 2026, they agreed to sell their entire footwear business to American Exchange Group for a mere $39M. That's a drop of 99% from their peak valuation - and left a shell of a company behind which had a NASDAQ listing and, quite literally, no business to speak of
Management then announced they'd be filling in this shell with something quite different - GPU acquisition and leasing out their high-performance GPUs to all manner of clients. To fund this experiment, they've lined up a $50M convertible financing facility, with an institutional investor willing to come on board - pending shareholder approval in May
The thing is though, Allbirds have already requested that their shareholders give them a few other things too. They want to rebrand as NewBird AI, give up on their public benefit corporation status (which was tied to some nice environmental goals), and to top it off, they're seeking shareholder approval for a special dividend due to shareholders on record by May 20. They're also not saying a word about revenue projections, customer pipelines, or any of the gory details about the GPU acquisition - so who knows what's really going on here.
The 600% surge was almost entirely driven by the hype around AI and heavy retail investor buying - this had very little to do with any actual shift in the business itself. Before you know it, the stock became a bit of a social media sensation - people were comparing it to those blockchain rebranding plays from a decade ago. By the end of the day on April 16, that hype had pretty much died down, with the stock trading around $10 to $12 - which is still loads above where it was before the announcement, but a far cry from those intraday highs of $24.
After that wild sell-off from the $19 top on April 15, BIRD has been pulling back into a zone that's meaningful for Fibonacci retracements. The stock is currently being tested in the $10.60 to $10.00 area - that's where the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement of the whole climb sits.
If the stock manages to hold above $10 on a closing basis, a recovery toward $13.30 and then $15.90 isn't out of the question - those are some reasonable upside targets. But if it breaks - the next significant support level doesn't kick in until around $7.00 - that's the 0.786 Fibonacci level.

Trade Setup
Support entry: Hold it above $10.00 to $10.60 on close - if you do get a bounce, check that RSI stays above 50.
Target 1: $13.30 - first place to look for a recovery above the fib zone.
Target 2: $15.90 - that's the next big level of resistance and part of a retracement of the sell-off.
Stop loss: A daily close below $10.00 - that starts to open the door to $7.00 - pull out immediately
The thing is, nobody really knows yet - and that uncertainty is already written all over the wild price swings over the last two days.
People who are optimistic about BIRD Stock think that the idea that GPU computing demand is through the roof and getting bigger all the time is actually a valid one. CoreWeave, the GPU cloud company that went public back in March 2026, raised a valuation of $23 billion on the same principle. A $50 million war chest may seem like a drop in the ocean compared to CoreWeave, but if NewBird AI can score long term lease contracts with even a handful of big-time enterprise AI clients, then the current market cap does leave room for a pretty big upside.
On the other side of the argument, it's pretty simple really. Allbirds has zero experience in getting its hands on chips, running data centres, or selling cloud services to big business. And that $50 million facility they've got lined up is only going to dilute the stocks value even further, and to be honest $50 million is going to buy a lot less GPU juice than it sounds like when you're talking about clusters of H100s that cost tens of millions of dollars. All the analysts who used to cover Allbirds are now pretty quiet, and no major investment bank has come out with a price target for the new company - yet the comparisons to all those blockchain rebranding scams of 2017 and 2018 that eventually tanked are a bit uncomfortable but let's be honest - not entirely unfair.
The next big test is the shareholder vote in May - if the financing comes through and management actually starts laying out some details on how they plan to get hold of all those Gpu's and what customers are actually on board, then the stock might just start to stabilize and build a bit of a base. But if this vote is delayed or the $50 million facility just falls through, then watch out for that $7 support level to be put to the test pretty quick.
Why did Allbirds stock go up 600% overnight?
BIRD stock - well, it popped thanks to Allbirds announcing it's basically chucking in the footwear game, rebranding as NewBird AI and is going to start selling GPUs to AI developers and big companies instead. And that, combined with a 50 million dollar financing deal, caused a right old kerfuffle on April 15 - loads of retail buying and people on social media were buzzing about it. The stock rose to almost 24 dollars after opening at 2.49, before falling back to 16.99, then some people decided to cash out and the price dropped by 25 to 36% the next day.
What is NewBird AI and what does Allbirds plan to do with GPUs?
NewBird is the new name for Allbirds after it sold its footwear arm to American Exchange Group for 39 million dollars. NewBird is now going to buy high powered GPUs - you know the fancy computer chips - and then rent out access to them to big companies, AI developers and those hyperscalers. They've got a 50 million dollar bit of financing lined up, but they're going to have to get shareholder approval in May first for it to go ahead. They haven't said anything about how much money they expect to make or who they've got lined up as customers.
What is the BIRD stock price target after the AI pivot?
No big name analysts have gone on the record with a price target for NewBird since they made the pivot announcement. But basically you've got a key level to watch - if the price stays between 10 to 10.60 that's a good sign, and that could open up the possibility of the price rising to 13.30 or 15.90. But if it falls through 10 on a closing basis, you might see the price drop all the way to 7 dollars. The next big thing that's going to decide the share price is when the shareholders vote on the rebrand and the financing deal in May.