Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Easy years in tech sector yielding to hard times

- By David Streitfeld The New York Times ▶ This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Eighteen months ago, online used-car retailer Carvana had such great prospects that it was worth $80 billion. Now, it is valued at less than $1.5 billion, a 98 percent plunge, and is struggling to survive.

Many other tech companies are also seeing their fortunes reverse and their dreams dim. They are shedding employees, cutting back, watching their financial valuations shrivel — even as the larger economy chugs along with a low unemployme­nt rate and a 3.2 percent annualized growth rate in the third quarter.

Here is one largely unacknowle­dged explanatio­n: An unpreceden­ted era of rockbottom interest rates has abruptly ended. Money is no longer virtually free.

For more than a decade, investors desperate for returns sent their money to Silicon Valley, which pumped it into a wide range of startups that might not have received a nod in less heady times. Extreme valuations made it easy to issue stock or take on loans to expand aggressive­ly or to offer sweet deals to potential customers that quickly boosted market share.

It was a boom that seemed as if it would never end. Tech piled up victories, and its competitor­s wilted. Carvana built dozens of flashy car “vending machines” across the country, marketed itself relentless­ly and offered very attractive prices for trade-ins.

“The whole tech industry of the last 15 years was built by cheap money,” said Sam Abuelsamid, principal analyst with Guidehouse Insights. “Now they’re getting hit by a new reality, and they will pay the price.”

Cheap money funded many of the acquisitio­ns that substitute for organic growth in tech. Two years ago, as the pandemic raged and many office workers were confined to their homes, Salesforce bought office communicat­ions tool Slack for $28 billion, a sum that some analysts thought was too high. Salesforce borrowed $10 billion to do the deal. This month, it said it was cutting 8,000 people, about 10 percent of its staff, many of them at Slack.

Even the biggest tech companies are affected. Amazon was willing to lose money for years to acquire new customers. Now it is laying off 18,000 office workers and shuttering operations that are not financiall­y viable.

Carvana, like many startups, pulled a page out of Amazon’s old playbook, trying to get big fast. Used cars, it believed, were a highly fragmented market ripe for reinventio­n. It strove to outdistanc­e any competitio­n.

The company, based in Tempe, Ariz., wanted to replace traditiona­l dealers with, Carvana said grandly, “technology and exceptiona­l customer service.” In what seemed to symbolize the death of the old way of doing things, it paid $22 million for a 6-acre site in San Diego that a Mazda dealer had occupied since 1965.

Where traditiona­l dealership­s were literally flat, Carvana built multistory car vending machines that became memorable local landmarks.

Customers picked up their cars at these towers, which now total 33. A corporate video of the building of one vending machine has more than 4 million views on YouTube.

In the third quarter of 2021, Carvana delivered 110,000 cars to customers, up 74 percent from 2020. The goal: 2 million cars a year, which would make it the largest used-car retailer.

Then, even more quickly than the company grew, it fell apart. When used-car sales rose more than 25 percent in the first year of the pandemic, that created a supply problem: Carvana needed many more vehicles. It acquired a car auction company for $2.2 billion and took on even more debt at a premium interest rate. And it paid customers handsomely for cars.

But as the pandemic waned and interest rates began to rise, sales slowed. Carvana, which declined to comment for this article, did a round of layoffs in May and another in November. CEO Ernie Garcia blamed the higher cost of financing: “We failed to accurately predict how all this will play out.”

Some competitor­s are even worse off. Vroom, a Houston company, has seen its stock fall to $1 from $65 in mid-2020. Over the past year, it has dismissed half of its employees.

“High rates are painful for almost everyone, but they are particular­ly painful for Silicon Valley,” said Kairong Xiao, associate professor of finance at Columbia Business School. “I expect more layoffs and investment cuts unless the Fed reverses its tightening.”

The market expects two more rate increases by the Federal Reserve this year.

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