Spending drive knocks Spotify shares after Q1 beat

Published Wed, Apr 27, 2022 · 10:55 PM
    • Spotify has bet big on podcasts, investing over a billion dollars in acquiring shows such as the The Joe Rogan Experience and other businesses in a bid to draw users to a growing non-music audio segment.
    • Spotify has bet big on podcasts, investing over a billion dollars in acquiring shows such as the The Joe Rogan Experience and other businesses in a bid to draw users to a growing non-music audio segment. PHOTO: REUTERS

    SPOTIFY Technology said currency moves and a big increase in hiring would push it to an operating loss in the second quarter, sending the streaming giant's shares down 11 per cent on Wednesday (Apr 27) despite a forecast-beating rise in first quarter revenue.

    The company predicted it would make an operating loss of 197 million euros (S$287 million) in the current quarter, but said investments would position it for growth in the decade ahead.

    "Spotify's got to spend in order to continue attracting new users," said Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Laura Hoy. "But there's no way around the fact that such steep losses will eventually start eating into the group's sturdy cash position."

    Spotify said its total number of monthly active users rose 19 per cent to a record 422 million in the first quarter ended Mar 31, and it saw a jump in advertising income.

    A service outage in March caused some users to be involuntarily locked out of the service, prompting about 3 million to create new accounts to log back in. Excluding this anomaly, monthly active users would have reached 419 million.

    The company has bet big on podcasts, investing over a billion dollars in acquiring shows such as the The Joe Rogan Experience and other businesses in a bid to draw users to a growing non-music audio segment.

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    Spotify said listening reached a record in the quarter, as members choose from among 4 million podcasts.

    "Overall podcast consumption is strong and increasingly sticky," said CEO Daniel Ek during the investor call.

    A backlash over Rogan's podcast, in which he was accused of spreading misinformation about Covid-19 and criticized for his use of racial epithets, did not translate to a net loss of listeners or subscribers.

    "The Joe Rogan controversy that rocked Spotify this February now feels like a hiccup on the company's ascension to top global streaming audio platform," said Forrester analyst Kelsey Chickering, noting that its share of the audio streaming market was twice the size of Apple Music.

    The Swedish company posted a 24 per cent increase in first-quarter revenue to 2.66 billion euros (US$2.82 billion). Analysts on average had expected revenue of 2.62 billion euros, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

    The company now expects total monthly active users of 428 million in the second quarter, a number that reflects a loss of about 5 million monthly listeners because of the decision to suspend service in Russia.

    It forecast second-quarter revenue of 2.8 billion euros, compared with estimates of 2.81 billion euros.

    Premium subscribers, who account for most of the company's revenue, rose to 182 million from 158 million in the first quarter, while advertisement-supported revenue rose 31 per cent to 282 million euros. REUTERS

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