Las Vegas Review-Journal

Backers: Peloton not working out

Company outlook poor as gyms return

- By Matt Ott

SILVER SPRING, Md. — Peloton suffered its worst day as a publicly traded company Friday after telling investors that it will likely lose more money than it had expected in fiscal 2022.

Peloton thrived during the pandemic, recording its first and only profitable quarters with Americans unable to hit the gym, instead setting up places to work out at home. Sales of its high-end bikes and treadmills soared, as did subscripti­ons for its online, interactiv­e classes.

Those sky-high sales have stalled, however, since the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines. Gyms have re-opened, with some restrictio­ns, and people are beginning to spend money on other things, like travel and restaurant­s.

Late Thursday, the New York City company said that it expects those lucrative subscripti­ons to drop 6 percent and losses in 2022 of between $425 million and $475 million. That’s a lot more red ink than its previous guidance of $325 million in losses.

Peloton has other problems. It’s wrestling with the same snarled global supply chains that have plagued manufactur­ers this year as economies reopen. What’s more, gyms that had closed during the pandemic began offering their own virtual classes, further encroachin­g on one of the company’s greatest strengths.

It is also recovering from a recall of its treadmill machine, something it had fought, after it was linked to a death of a child and numerous injuries.

“Given the unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces presented by the global pandemic, we said last quarter that modeling the exit from COVID and the massive growth we saw in fiscal 2021 would be a challengin­g task, and that has certainly proven to be true,” CEO John Foley told investors on a conference call.

Shares tumbled 33 percent to $60.14 Friday, the worst trading day for the company just 10 months after shares hit an all-time high above $171.

Peloton’s early success also brought new competitio­n, companies that offered cheaper bicycles and exercise equipment. In August, the company cut the price of its Peloton Bike — its marquee technology — to $1,495 from $1,895.

Industry analysts were quick to cut expectatio­ns for the company Friday, with one citing “rapid deteriorat­ion” in Peloton’s guidance for next year.

Scott Devitt of Stifel said he had believed Peloton would continue to grow even with the worst of the pandemic seemingly in the rearview mirror. He is recalibrat­ing that opinion.

“Now, given the materially lower expectatio­ns, we expect it will take several quarters to determine a more normalized pace of growth, or more skepticall­y, whether or not the revised outlook is an indication that the core product may be closer to maturity in existing markets than previously thought,” Devitt wrote to clients.

Peloton reported sales of $805 million for the first quarter of fiscal 2022, close to most Wall Street targets. But Wall Street focused on what’s to come. The company lowered its sales expectatio­ns to a range of $4.4 billion to $4.8 billion in 2022, well below the $5.3 billion analysts had forecast.

 ?? John Seewer The Associated Press ?? Peloton CEO John Foley, left, shown Aug. 9 in Luckey, Ohio, told investors Friday that the company was expected to lose more money than previously forecast in 2022.
John Seewer The Associated Press Peloton CEO John Foley, left, shown Aug. 9 in Luckey, Ohio, told investors Friday that the company was expected to lose more money than previously forecast in 2022.

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