In a bizarre leak, Twitter’s first quarter earnings made it onto the Internet — read: Twitter — before the cessation of regular trading, sending the company’s shares sharply lower. Trading was halted for a period.
The company reported revenue of $436 million, an increase of 74 percent on a year-over-year basis. That number missed the company’s own guidance, as well as street estimates that the company would report $456.8 million. Twitter earned $0.07 using adjusted metrics, and lost $0.25 using normal accounting methods (GAAP). The street had expected an adjusted profit of $0.04.
The company’s GAAP net profit fell during the period, compared to the year-ago quarter, expanding from negative $132.3 million, to negative $162.4 million. The company’s GAAP EPS also fell by several cents, to negative $0.25.
So, Twitter beat on profit, missed on revenue — why the massive drop in its share price? Two answers: Lower guidance for 2015, and user growth that fails to excite.
Guidance
The first of two womps, Twitter put its reduced guidance in its headline:
The company expects that in the current quarter, it will generate revenue of between $470 million and $485 million. The company does not appear to predict that it will be profitable in the period. While the revenue projection does, on a sequential basis, best the first quarter’s record, the street had expected a much higher $538.2 million tally. Twitter’s estimates are miles light.
For the full year, Twitter expects to generate revenue of $2.17 billion to $2.27 billion. The market had expected Twitter to generate $2.37 billion in revenue during the year. Twitter and the street are again distant in terms of their expectations.
Lower future revenue deprecates, explicitly, potential future profits and shareholder returns.
Users
Twitter reported that its monthly active user count has reached 302 million, up 18 percent compared to the year-ago quarter, and up from 288 million in the sequentially preceding quarter. The company indicated that it sees 80 percent of its monthly actives as monthly mobile actives.
Mobile advertising constituted 89 percent of Twitter’s total ad revenues, which came to $388 million in the quarter.
Twitter has long been judged harshly for user growth that investors have found to be either unremarkable, or downright disappointing. Twitter has often beaten expectations on the financial side, but missed on its ability to drive new engagement. Akin to the revenue and cash flow point, if Twitter can’t grow its user base, it can’t, eventually, make more money. Investors don’t like that much.
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Twitter’s GAAP loss of $162 million overshadows its impressive $147 million in internationally sourced revenue, which itself grew 109 percent compared to year-ago quarter. Twitter shares are down as it failed again to convince the world that not only can it make a lot of money, but that it can chart a course to a billion users. Twitter: Maybe not as big as was originally anticipated.
from TechCrunch http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/XA-TPVYYvmM/
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