GoPro will be more than a 1- click pony
GoPro Inc. announced plans to move beyond its Hero brand of wearable cameras, easing some investor concerns that it was a single- product company.
Chief Executive Officer Nick Woodman said GoPro is developing a drone for capturing video from the skies, and working on a product that will allow video and photo recording for virtual reality. The shares rose 6.6 percent on Thursday to close at $ 56.81, their highest since Jan. 9. The gain left the stock down 10 percent for the year.
“This puts some of the naysayers on their heels, who thought this was just a one- hit wonder,” said Erinn Murphy, an analyst at Piper Jaffray & Co.
She estimated that GoPro can take 10 to 25 percent of the drone market, which she expects to grow to $ 5 billion in 2020 from $ 2 billion this year. Its strong name recognition — GoPro was the most viewed
brand on YouTube last year, she said — will help the company win a substantial share of the industry.
GoPro’s Six- Camera Spherical Array for virtual reality will be available in the second half of this year, Woodman said Wednesday at the Code Conference in Rancho Palos Verdes ( Los Angeles County). It will use technology developed by Kolor, a startup that the San Mateo company acquired in April. He said the drone will be available in the first half of next year. Woodman declined to state pricing and other specifics.
Murphy said both initiatives fit well into GoPro’s strategy.
“We live in a somewhat narcissistic culture,” she said. “We love our selfies and documenting our own lives, and GoPro has been able to capitalize on that.”