Vancouver Sun

Twitter investors might not be so enamoured with sale, analyst says

- JULIE VERHAGE AND LILY KATZ

Investors may have been NEW YOR K looking forward to the potential of a Twitter Inc. sale in recent months, but at least one analyst is saying that everyone’s in for disappoint­ment.

Oppenheime­r Holdings Inc. analyst Jason Helfstein said in a note that he was downgradin­g the stock to underperfo­rm, following the 21 per cent boost to its share price delivered by reports of a potential sale. “Based on slowing user growth, poor product implementa­tion/execution, decreasing user engagement, inferior advertisin­g technology, platform safety issues, and strong competitio­n,” he establishe­d a new price target of US$17, compared to a few cents north of US$22 where the stock trades now.

While potential buyers could get their hands on valuable data, the acquisitio­n’s not without risks. If Salesforce.com Inc. were to buy Twitter, the deal “would be dilutive and could create uncertaint­y around Salesforce’s strategy and capital discipline,” RBC Capital Markets analysts led by Ross MacMillan said in a note, questionin­g the benefits of buying the firm as opposed to partnering, as the two companies have for a number of years.

Some of those headaches stream from an existentia­l question that still dogs Twitter 10 years after it went live: its inability to decide whether it’s a media or technology company.

According to Helfstein, the firm’s attempts to compete with more traditiona­l media would have been disappoint­ing, given the inability of even major news events to rally Tweeters. “Based on data from Google Trends, the Olympics did not cause an increase in engagement. This is discouragi­ng, as Twitter would appear to be well positioned to take advantage of this type of event, as a real-time social platform,” he said, adding that its streaming deal with the NFL was also a bit of a miss, averaging 243,000 viewers; about 1.5 per cent of live TV.

“We believe that Twitter is overvalued compared to its peers, and is already discountin­g a takeout premium. Moreover, any acquirer would have to cash out employee options and make large capital investment­s to improve the user experience and advertisin­g technology,” he concludes.

Twitter currently has seven buy ratings, 26 hold ratings and eight sell ratings, with a consensus price target that trails even Helfstein’s revised expectatio­ns. The stock has an average 12-month target price of US$16.54, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada