Fitbit Q1 16A – Forced hand.

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Fitbit is being forced to spend to stay ahead.

  • Fitbit reported good Q1 16A results but cut guidance in order to ramp up spending placing unrealistic expectations of profitability in H2 2016.
  • This is particularly worrying as there are clear signs that commoditisation is forcing the company to increase spending, hitting profits.
  • Q1 16A revenues / adj-EPS were $505m / $0.10 nicely ahead of consensus at $443m / $0.03 but EPS for the quarter ahead is going to be weak.
  • Q2 16E revenues are expected to be $565m-$585m ($575m midpoint) ahead of consensus at $533m but expectations of adj-EPS at $0.08-$0.11 are way below consensus of $0.26.
  • Gross margins are slipping as commoditisation creeps in but the real problem is OPEX.
  • Fitbit is right in that it needs to spend on R&D and sales and marketing to stay ahead of its rivals, but general and admin expenses (G&A) are a real worry.
  • In Q1 15A G&A expenses were $13.0m or 3.9% of sales but in Q1 16A they jumped to $35.7m or 7.1% of sales.
  • My threshold for G&A is 5% and this sudden elevation has all the hallmarks of indisciplined expansion.
  • This in turn makes me worry about the quality of the investments that the company is making in both R&D and sales and marketing.
  • If these investments do not produce results, then commoditisation will accelerate and gross margin will continue to decline hitting the already fragile profitability.
  • The good news is that Fitbit knows exactly what it has to do which is to increase the stickiness of its users through the refinement of its embryonic ecosystem.
  • This alone puts Fitbit miles ahead of GoPro when it comes to dealing with aggressive competition and slowing and saturated end markets.
  • When it comes to an ecosystem the key is the number of users and the degree to which they are engaged with one’s services.
  • Fitbit posted some encouraging figures at its 2015 year end results in January with 16.9m active users making up 59% of the registered user base.
  • These users were also more engaged with an average of 7.5 connections to other users compared to 4.9 at the end of 2014.
  • Unfortunately, Fitbit declined to update these figures leading me to believe that there was nothing particularly good to report.
  • This is concerning because if the investments that it is making in R&D and sales and marketing pay off, it is in user numbers and engagement that the results will be first seen.
  • Gross margin stabilisation and profits will then follow but it is in the ecosystem where the loyalty and preference will be generated that will give Fitbit pricing power.
  • Somewhat inexplicably, Fitbit also raised its adj-EPS guidance for the full year to $1.12 – $1.24 from $1.08-$1.20 meaning that to meet guidance Fitbit needs to generate 83% of its net profit in the last 6 months of the year.
  • Given the environment, this looks to be a very tall order and I suspect that there is a heavy cut to full year EPS guidance coming either in June or October.
  • My concerns around both the market for its products and its fiscal discipline lead me to believe that Fitbit could realistically generate adjusted EPS of $0.80 for the full year.
  • This leaves the company with a 2016E PER of 18.5x which is quite punchy for a company showing little profit growth and at high risk of commoditisation.
  • I would be more comfortable between $10-12 a share rather than the $14.90 that it is currently at but if forced to choose I would have this over GoPro.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.