Airbnb & Uber – Tale of two marketplaces.

Airbnb Q2 2022 – Great company, bad stock.

  • Airbnb reported good results and cash flow but concerns around growth hit sentiment which has obviously prompted the company to announce a buyback to prop up the shares.
  • Q2 2022 revenue / EPS were $2.1bn / $0.56 pretty much in line with guidance of $2.1bn / $0.43.
  • Bookings rose by 25% to 103.7m nights but this missed forecasts of 106m raising concerns that the growth that is priced into the shares may be slower than demanded.
  • That being said guidance was good with $2.78bn – $2.88bn in revenues expected in Q3 2022 ahead of consensus at $2.78bn but this looks like it may have more to do with inflation as opposed to organic growth.
  • The company clearly knows this which is why it is trying to prop up its flagging valuation with a $2bn share buyback.
  • Airbnb is a classic situation of good company, bad stock.
  • I love Airbnb as it serves a need, is the runaway leader in its space and is unopposed meaning no real competition.
  • However, even after falling 8% the company still has an EV of $65bn meaning that it is trading on around 12x 2022 EV / Sales and more than 50x 2022 PER.
  • This is a ludicrous valuation for this company and while I would love to own the shares, I see very little upside.
  • In fact, if the bear market continues, this one is likely to get hit hardest.
  • I am steering clear despite my liking of the company itself.

Uber Q2 2022 – Cash generation.

  • Uber reported good Q2 2022 results as demand has come roaring back in all of its sectors which allowed the company to generate cash for the very first time.
  • Q2 2022 revenues / EPS were $8.07bn / LOSS$1.33 compared to forecasts of $7.3bn / LOSS$0.27, but crucially the company generated cash.
  • Cash flow from operations was $439m which even after FX adjustments and capex still allowed $272m to be added to cash reserves during the quarter.
  • This is far more important than EPS in my view as the real value of a company is the present value of its cash flow and it is cash flow that allows a company to survive regardless of what EPS does.
  • The main difference between profit and cash flow was $470m in stock-based compensation expense and $1.7bn in unrealised losses on financial assets that were marked to market during the quarter.
  • MaUs are up to 122m ahead of 121m forecasts and Uber is seeing solid recovery in ride-hailing, food delivery and freight.
  • It looks like Uber is on course to report revenues of around $30bn – $33bn this year which with an EV of $62bn puts it on an EV / Sales of 2.0x for 2022.
  • This brings Uber into the valuation range where I start paying more attention.
  • Uber is the dominant player in North America and with network-based businesses, one always wants to own the dominant player.
  • Consequently, I think it is worth taking a closer look at Uber as there are signs that it is finally turning the corner.

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.