Los Angeles Times

Snap beats Wall St. expectatio­ns

Shares soar after it posts 72% increase in 4th-quarter revenue.

- By David Pierson

After a bruising first year as a publicly traded company, Snap Inc. has finally earned some much-needed breathing room.

Shares of the Venice company behind the video messaging app Snapchat surged more than 25% in afterhours trading after Snap reported stronger-than-expected results Tuesday in its latest earnings report.

Snap reported revenue of $285.7 million in the fourth quarter, a 72% increase from a year earlier, thanks to surprising growth in users and advertisin­g. That blew away analysts’ estimate of $253 million.

It was the first time Snap beat Wall Street’s expectatio­ns, helping the struggling

company finish its fiscal year strong.

“This was a monster quarter relative to bearish expectatio­ns,” said Daniel Ives, an analyst for GBH Insights. “This was a major step in the right direction for Snap as the turnaround appears [to be] showing signs of life into 2018.”

Snapchat added 8.9 million daily active users, its largest jump since the third quarter of 2016. The company now has 187 million daily active users. Analysts had expected 184 million.

More advertisin­g pushed the average revenue per user up 46% from a year earlier to $1.53, well above the estimate of $1.36. Advertiser­s tend to spend more at the end of the year because of the holiday season.

Still, Snap’s success in eking out more revenue from its users can’t be explained seasonally. Gross margins jumped to 36% in the fourth quarter compared with 8% a year earlier.

Snap’s co-founder and chief executive, Evan Spiegel, credited a redesign of Snapchat, an improved experience for Android users and a switch to programmat­ic ad buying — an automated auction for advertiser­s — for turning around the company’s trajectory. Programmat­ic buying lowers ad rates because of its efficiency, but Snap was able to offset that by adding more advertiser­s.

“Our business really came together towards the end of last year, and I am very proud of our team for working hard to deliver these results,” Spiegel said in prepared remarks for investors Tuesday. “We executed well on our 2017 plan to improve quality, performanc­e and automation, which removed friction from our advertisin­g business and improved our applicatio­n.”

Snap shares traded as high as $17.80 after hours after closing at $14.06. The company hadn’t matched its $17 March initial public offering price since July.

Snap posted a net loss of $350 million, or 28 cents a share, in the quarter that ended Dec. 31. Analysts had expected a loss of $410 million, or 33 cents a share.

The same time last year, Snap posted a net loss of $170 million, or 20 cents a share. It finished 2017 with a net loss of $3.45 billion. The company totaled $826 million in revenue for the full year.

Before Tuesday’s earnings report, Snap’s prospects looked increasing­ly challengin­g because of fierce competitio­n for users and advertisin­g from Facebook and its photo- and videoshari­ng app Instagram.

Snap was showing cracks with periodic layoffs and the departure of at least seven executives since the company’s IPO.

Analysts say Tuesday’s report increases optimism that Snapchat will reach 200 million users by next year — putting it about 100 million users short of Instagram.

The key thing to watch is how Snapchat reconciles its appeal with its core audience of young users and its efforts to make the app more accessible to a wider — and older — demographi­c. The changes include a redesign in November to make the app more intuitive for the Facebook set and a move to allow users to share public content on other platforms.

“It runs counter to why Snapchat was appealing to its younger demographi­c in the first place, and I worry it will alienate that existing user base because they’re now trying to cater to the masses and Wall Street,” said Jessica Liu, a Forrester analyst.

‘This was a monster quarter relative to bearish expectatio­ns. This was a major step in the right direction for Snap as the turnaround appears [to be] showing signs of life into 2018.’ — Daniel Ives, GBH Insights analyst

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? S NA P posted fourth-quarter revenue of $285.7 million, smashing analysts’ estimate of $253 million. Above, CEO Evan Spiegel, center, marks Snap’s March IPO.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times S NA P posted fourth-quarter revenue of $285.7 million, smashing analysts’ estimate of $253 million. Above, CEO Evan Spiegel, center, marks Snap’s March IPO.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States