Tag Archives: mtch

High-Flying Tech Unicorns Will Get Wings Clipped

The private-market value of high-flying “unicorns” is certain to fall as the recent rout in stock markets and the continued weakness for initial public offerings take their toll. Lowered valuations reverberate in several ways, often leading to a slowdown in funding needed to keep companies afloat and also causing highly valued employees to head for the exits, several analysts said. Unicorns are privately held companies with valuations of $1 billion or more. CB Insights counts 152 of them, with a combined valuation of about $532 billion in the latest tally. But just like the value of a home for sale is not certain until it’s actually sold, the same is true of private companies. “The reset of unicorn valuations is not showing up just yet, but the conversations are happening,” said Anand Sanwal, CEO of CB Insights, which tracks IPO investing and unicorns. “We hear that companies are being advised to raise money sooner than later, as the capital available now may not be there in six months,” he said. The largest unicorn is Uber, the San Francisco-based ride-hailing company with a market valuation reported to be near $65 billion after completing a $2 billion funding round in early December. Following Uber is Chinese smartphone company Xiaomi, valued at $46 billion. Then comes accommodation-services provider Airbnb at $25.5 billion. Other high-profile unicorns include Snapchat, Spotify and Pinterest. There are various ways a company’s valuation is rated. A common method is tracking the market value of similar companies listed on stock exchanges. When their value falls, investors devalue their private counterparts. Valuations are based on the company’s latest funding round, which can vary in length from about one year to 18 months. The impact of the latest stock market crunch and weak IPO market is not yet baked in, but it’s coming. Last Friday, for example, Big Data analytics software maker Tableau Software ( DATA ) crashed nearly 50% after reporting fourth-quarter earnings that contained a weak Q1 outlook. Tableau’s report sank the stock of other Big Data companies, such as Splunk ( SPLK ), Qlik Technologies ( QLIK ) and Hortonworks ( HDP ). “The big drops we’ve experienced in the public markets will reach into the private markets, which is typically followed by a contraction in funding,” said Kathleen Smith, a principal at Renaissance Capital, which manages two IPO-focused ETFs. “The pure size of the private company valuations we’ve seen is unprecedented and not sustainable.” Lowered valuations have reportedly emerged in some areas. Jawbone, a provider of fitness tracking devices, last month said it had raised $165 million in funding at a reported valuation of $1.5 billion, or about half what it was valued at in 2014. The lowered valuation comes as fitness tracker Fitbit ( FIT ), which came public in June at a price of 20, closed Tuesday at 14.30. Also last month, Foursquare said it raised $45 million in a new round of venture funding. A report by the New York Times said Foursquare’s valuation was roughly half of the approximately $650 million that it was valued at in its last round in 2013, as it tries to bolster its location-data-based advertising businesses. As to how or when unicorn investors will get a return on investment, the IPO market is no place to look for that now. The IPO market in 2015, coming off two robust years, fell to a six-year low in the number of companies going public. There were no new issues in January, with just two in February thus far. “Pure and simple the IPO market is miserable,” said Scott Sweet, senior managing partner at research firm IPO Boutique. “IPO underwriters are in the most precarious situation we’ve seen in years. It’s the IPO buyers that are pricing these deals, not them.” One example is payment processing company Square ( SQ ), which debuted Nov. 19 at 9 a share, well below its expected range of 11 to 13. Square stock closed Tuesday at 8.62. “We need to see not only the market improve for all stocks, but especially for the few IPOs able to make it out now. If they don’t, it will close the IPO pipeline like a padlock,” said Sweet. The valuations of recent tech IPOs have been sharply cut. Security firm Rapid7 ( RPD ), which priced at 16 in July and peaked above 27 on its first trading day, closed Tuesday at 9.46. Hortonworks, which had a December 2014 IPO price of 16, closed at 7.43. Sharp declines have hit dating firm Match.com ( MTCH ) and data storage firm Pure Storage ( PSTG ). Action camera maker  GoPro ( GPRO ), which came public in June 2014 at 24, closed at 11.39 Tuesday. “Spotify, Snapchat, Pinterest, name after name — they would not IPO in this market,” said Sweet.

Dating Site Match Group Plunges On Mixed Earnings

Dating conglomerate Match Group ( MTCH ) stock tumbled intraday Thursday after mixed Q4 results Wednesday afternoon. The company missed revenue expectations but beat what Wall Street estimated for earnings. The company reported revenue of $268 million, up 12% from the year-earlier quarter but below the $277 million that analysts had predicted. The company’s earnings per share ex items came in at 24 cents, above the 20 cents that analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had estimated and down 25% from a year earlier. Match Group stock plummeted 11% to about 9.50 in the stock market today , dipping as low as 8.75 in the morning. The company has an IBD Composite Rating of 55, where 99 is the highest. These results represent the first time that Match Group has reported since the  InterActiveCorp ( IAC ) unit’s November IPO . UBS analyst Eric Sheridan wrote in a research note Thursday that “noise in the initial EPS report should confuse” from the firm’s long-term growth and value proposition for investors. He called Match Group executives “disciplined” in their investment approach and growth in the long run. In terms of the stock price, Sheridan said, “We think investors are already pricing in single-digit revenue growth,” adding that investors believe margins won’t improve in the future. But, Sheridan says, since the stock sits 20% above his worst-case scenario, with 70% upside to his price target of 18, the stock currently offers a compelling risk vs. reward scenario for investors. In prepared remarks on the company’s earnings call with analysts, Match Group executives said that the company expects dating revenue growth of between 5% and 7% in each quarter of 2016. Executives expect non-dating revenue to grow by “high single digits” in Q1, compared with the year-earlier quarter, and in the mid-double digits for the full year. Guidance implies 2016 dating revenue of $1.12 billion, up 22%, according to a Thursday research note from Cowen analyst John Blackledge.  

Mark Zuckerberg, Netflix binge-watching butt of jokes

Late-night comedians have more to make fun of these days than presidential candidates, the Oscars and Chipotle. They’ve also been taking shots at tech company foibles. Among their recent targets have been Amazon.com (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Facebook (FB), Match Group (MTCH), Microsoft (MSFT), Netflix (NFLX) and Twitter (TWTR). Joining in on the humor have been talk-show hosts Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, Conan O’Brien and James Corden. Let’s get right