The Hamilton Spectator

Shopify shares fall as growth slows

Software firm posts $273M loss for first quarter, predicts revenue gains will drop to high teens

- SAMMY HUDES

Shopify Inc.’s shares slumped Wednesday as the company reported a loss in its latest quarter and forecast slower revenue growth for next quarter in its financial outlook.

The e-commerce software company, which keeps its books in U.S. dollars, says its net loss for the quarter ended March 31 amounted to $273 million or 21 cents U.S. per diluted share.

That compared with a profit of $68 million or five cents U.S. per diluted share in the same quarter last year.

Revenue for the quarter totalled $1.86 billion, up 23 per cent from $1.51 billion in its first quarter last year.

The results pushed Shopify’s share price down $20.41, or 19.3 per cent, to $85.34 in midday trading on Wednesday.

But revenue growth is expected to slow in the company’s next quarter to a “high-teens percentage,” it said in its outlook.

It attributed the sale of Shopify’s logistics business — announced last May when the company also revealed it was reducing its head count by about 20 per cent — for the forecast. The outlook anticipate­s revenue growth falling by three to four per cent in the second quarter on a year-over-year basis.

Shopify also expects its gross margin to fall half a percentage point from the first quarter.

Other challenges in the forecast include a stronger U.S. dollar and “some softness in European consumer spending,” chief financial officer Jeff Hoffmeiste­r told analysts on a conference call Wednesday.

“Europe and most specifical­ly the U.K. we are seeing some economic slowdown,” he said, noting Shopify has been doing “exceptiona­lly well” in that market recently.

Hoffmeiste­r also highlighte­d the anticipate­d smaller benefit from pricing changes in the second quarter compared with the first three months of the year.

“We remain resolutely confident in the great products and go-to-market initiative­s fuelling our continuous growth and our ability to further strengthen our position as a leader in unified commerce,” he said. “We expect Q2 to be a continuati­on of our strong momentum.”

The company said its merchants solutions revenue amounted to $1.35 billion in its latest quarter, up from $1.13 billion a year earlier, which it attributed primarily “to the benefit from the absence of logistics.”

Meanwhile, subscripti­on solutions revenue totalled $511 million, up from $382 million in the same quarter last year.

On an adjusted basis, Shopify said it earned 20 cents U.S. per diluted share in its latest quarter, up from an adjusted profit of a penny U.S. per share in the first quarter of 2023.

That compared with analysts’ expectatio­ns of 17 cents U.S. per diluted share, according to LSEG Data & Analytics.

Following last year’s job cuts, Shopify has kept its head count flat for three consecutiv­e quarters, said president Harley Finkelstei­n. He said he believes Shopify can limit head count growth while “achieving a continued combinatio­n of consistent top-line growth and profitabil­ity” in part because of automation.

“Over the past 18 months, we’ve committed significan­t effort into building efficient infrastruc­ture and systems, which are instrument­al in streamlini­ng our work and maintainin­g our high velocity product releases,” Finkelstei­n said. “Essentiall­y, these systems and this infrastruc­ture act as catalysts, enabling us to operate with increased efficiency and speed.”

Hoffmeiste­r pointed to increased use of artificial intelligen­ce for merchant support. He said more than half of Shopify’s merchant support interactio­ns in the first quarter were assisted by AI “and often fully resolved with the help of AI.”

AI has also enabled 24/7 live support in eight languages that previously were offered only certain hours of the day.

“We have significan­tly enhanced the merchant experience,” he said.

“The average duration of support interactio­ns has decreased, and the introducti­on of AI has helped reduce the reluctance that some merchants previously had towards asking questions that they might perceive as trivial or naïve.”

 ?? SEAN K I L PAT R I C K THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Shopify Inc. reported a loss in its latest quarter as its revenue increased 23 per cent compared with a year ago.
SEAN K I L PAT R I C K THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Shopify Inc. reported a loss in its latest quarter as its revenue increased 23 per cent compared with a year ago.

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