(This is CNBC Pro’s live coverage of Tuesday’s analyst calls and Wall Street chatter. Please refresh every 20-30 minutes to view the latest posts.) A software stock and an e-commerce giant were among the stocks being talked about by analysts on Tuesday. Piper Sandler raised its price target on Atlassian to $225, implying upside of more than 25%. Meanwhile, Mizuho maintained Amazon as a top pick, noting its approaching an inflection point in its artificial intelligence initiatives. Check out the latest calls and chatter below. All times ET. 5:55 a.m.: Wells Fargo reiterates overweight rating on Las Vegas Sands but lowers price target Wells Fargo is still bullish on Las Vegas Sands long term, although it sees some near-term blips on the radar. Analyst Daniel Politzer reiterated his overweight rating on the casino and resort stock but lowered his price target to $58 from $60. This new forecast corresponds to a potential 35% upside for shares of Las Vegas Sands. The stock has slipped 13% in 2024. Politzer wrote that he was lowering his price to reflect updated gross gaming revenues, or GGR, and potential share shifts. While GGR has been solid for the last few months, overall growth decelerated over the course of last month. “Our LVS/WYNN est’s both reflect our expectation for modest sequential market share losses, w/ LVS affected by Londoner construction disruption,” the analyst said. However, Politzer believes that the setup for Las Vegas Sands could improve into the end of this year and 2025 once its estimates improve. “We are Overweight, but acknowledge LVS may be more suited for investors w/ duration/appreciation for capital return than those seeking NT upside from Macau GGR re-accelerating,” the analyst added. Politzer specifically highlighted the company’s Marina Bay Sands resort in Singapore as a “bright spot” in its portfolio. — Lisa Kailai Han 5:43 a.m.: Piper Sandler upgrades Atlassian to overweight after 25% sell-off Investors could be overlooking Atlassian at the moment, according to Piper Sandler. The investment firm upgraded the software stock to overweight from neutral. Analyst Rob Owens also increased his price target to $225 from $200. This updated forecast implies that shares of Atlassian could jump 26% from here. Shares of Atlassian have plunged 25% this year, making the risk/reward look more favorable. The analyst wrote that he sees “the current valuation as an attractive entry point into what we view as one of the most durable companies in our coverage.” As more consumers migrate to the cloud, Owens believes that this could drive further durable growth for the company. “We do believe that it is a question of when — not if — these enterprises will move to cloud. With a large amount of new data residency locations coming online in the last year, compelling new products in the cloud only like Atlassian Intelligence and more improvements on the way, we believe enterprise migrations will pick up steam going forward,” he wrote. Meanwhile, Atlassian’s product innovations could create cross-sell opportunities for the company. — Lisa Kailai Han 5:43 a.m.: Amazon reaching AI ‘inflection point,’ says Mizuho Mizuho thinks Amazon could soon get a major boost from artificial intelligence. The bank maintained the e-commerce giant as a top pick. Its $240 price target on the stock implies upside of 21.7% from Monday’s close. “Gen-AI projects are nearing an inflection point, with external-facing models 6 months away from commercial deployments,” analyst James Lee wrote. “After launch, we expect the consumption multiplier effect to kick in as inferencing activity should accelerate meaningfully given the large base of external customers.” “With that in mind, we have increased conviction of AWS acceleration and our above-the-Street revenue growth forecast of 20%,” Lee added. Amazon shares have popped nearly 30% year to date. AMZN YTD mountain AMZN year to date — Fred Imbert