Bangkok Post

Zoom Fills Its War Chest as Pandemic’s End Nears

Stock offering could expand company’s options as it slides into post-pandemic life

- DAN GALLAGHER

Zoom Video Communicat­ions didn’t exactly call its own peak, but the videoconfe­rencing superstar still has good reasons to cash in on investor enthusiasm.

Zoom filed papers Tuesday to sell $1.5 billion worth of common stock, its first offering since going public in April 2019.

The shares will be sold by the company, and Zoom included the typical boiler plate explanatio­n in its filing that the proceeds would be used for “working capital and general corporate purposes,” with the possibilit­y that the money also could help fund acquisitio­ns though no current deals are in the works.

Zoom’s videoconfe­rencing business is still booming, in large part because of Covid-19, but investors are already grappling with what postpandem­ic life could mean for the company.

The once-highflying stock is now 40% off its mid-October peak. And while still richly valued at around 30 times forward sales, it is no longer the most premium play among cloud stocks. At least a dozen now carry higher multiples relative to projected sales.

But Zoom is still valued at close to $100 billion, a level that software companies don’t typically reach until they have establishe­d multiple lines of business. So the company still faces some pressure to show it is no one trick pony.

The company disclosed Tuesday that it has now sold 1 million seats for its Zoom Phone service, which replaces office telephone systems.

That is a potentiall­y huge market, but also one with very well-entrenched competitor­s along with newer challenger­s such as Microsoft, Google and RingCentra­l.

Zoom might also have to look for deals that can expand its business.

According to FactSet, the company has only done one since going public — last year’s pickup of a small encryption company called Keybase for an estimated $43 million.

Many speculated that Zoom was competing with Salesforce for the purchase of Slack, but that deal turned out to have no other bidders.

It would have been a stretch for Zoom anyway. With less than $2 billion in gross cash on its current balance sheet, Zoom has less on hand than any other software company valued at more than $100 billion, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce.

Being valued like a player may soon force Zoom to start playing like one.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Zoom founder Eric Yuan at the Nasdaq in April 2019. The company is valued at close to $100 billion.
GETTY IMAGES/AFP Zoom founder Eric Yuan at the Nasdaq in April 2019. The company is valued at close to $100 billion.

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