National Post

Shopify dives after defence against short-seller claims.

- cl aire Br ownell

Shopify Inc. chief executive Tobias Lutke addressed criticism from short- seller Andrew Left Tuesday, denying his claims that the company uses illegal marketing tactics to drive growth.

In a conference call following the release of the Ottawa-based e-commerce software company’s third quarter results, Lutke opened by saying “this is going to be a fun one.”

He called Left’s claims “prepostero­us” and said outside legal counsel has assured him they are unsubstant­iated.

Lutke said Shopify complies with the U. S. Federal Trade Commission’s rules and keeps its affiliates up to date about their legal obligation­s. He said Shopify has not been contacted by the FTC since Left released his report.

“We do not sell business opportunit­ies. We sell a commerce platform,” Lutke said. “Implying these businesses are somehow illegitima­te is an insult to their hard work.”

On Oct. 4, Left’s Citron Research accused Shopify of promoting a “get rich quick scheme,” saying i t made misleading suggestion­s in marketing materials that merchants could quit their jobs and become millionair­es by setting up e- commerce stores using the service. He compared the company to Herbalife Ltd., which agreed in 2016 to restructur­e its business and pay $ 200 million to settle allegation­s made against it by the FTC.

Shortly after the conference call ended, Shopify’s shares fell 13 per cent from Monday’s closing price of US$ 109.37 t o US$ 95.54, recovering somewhat to US$99.49 by the close of trading.

Analysts asked for metrics that would provide more informatio­n about Left’s claims on the call, but executives did not disclose that informatio­n in detail.

Left responded to Lutke’s comments in a release posted online mid- day Tuesday. He said he was “unimpresse­d” by the response and called on Shopify to disclose its churn rate, or the number of customers who quit the platform after their first year.

“Churn needs to be analyzed, so investors can discount or strip out the dirty/ illegal part of their business that will inevitably be curbed by regulators,” Left said. “Citron has assembled a comprehens­ive folder, which we have forwarded to the FTC, and we are certain that the company will face an investigat­ion for selling business opportunit­ies.”

Left brought particular attention to Shopify’s affiliate marketing program, which gives partners a cut of sales made through links they post to Shopify online. He assembled a collage of screenshot­s from YouTube videos where people boast about earning huge sums of money through the platform.

On the call, chief operating officer Harley Finkelstei­n said people promoting Shopify on social media are not necessaril­y paid affiliates of the company. The affiliate marketers Shopify does partner with are carefully vetted and must comply with disclosure requiremen­ts, he said.

“Our team individual­ly approves every partner who applies after looking at their websites, their profiles and whether they’re a fit for our brand,” Finkelstei­n said. “Our partners are part of our com- petitive advantage and help us identify potential merchants we may not otherwise be able to reach.”

Finkelstei­n said Shopify recruits most new customers organicall­y or through paid search advertisin­g, not affiliate marketing.

The company had $ 171.5 million in sales in the quarter ending Sept. 30, topping the average analyst projection of $ 166.5 million. Shopify also reported adjusted earnings per share of 5 cents, beating estimates for a loss of 2 cents.

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