Airbnb – Unfortunate brush.

Airbnb is not WeWork.

  • Airbnb is being tarred with the WeWork, Uber and Lyft brush, but a closer look reveals a company that has already proved that it can make money.
  • Whether the company is worth the $31bn it was valued at when it last raised money is a story for another day, but what is clear is that it is in a much better position to IPO than any of WeWork, Uber or Lyft.
  • The Information (see here) has broken the news that the company swung heavily into loss-making territory in Q1 2019 mainly as a result of a 58% increase in sales and marketing to $367m.
  • A 51% increase in product development and a 30 % increase in operational expenditure also played a role.
  • This sounds eerily familiar but there are some critical differences that need to be taken into account.
    • First, History: Up to the end of 2018, Airbnb had, over its history, generated more cash than it had lost.
    • This can be seen in its balance sheet where at the end of 2018, there was more cash available than the company has cumulatively raised over its history.
    • The company has been profitable on an EBITDA (roughly equivalent to operating cash flow) basis in 2017 and 2018 explaining the cash balance.
    • This means that for 2019, the company has made a decision to invest heavily for the next stage of its growth which is why profitability has plummeted.
    • Given its cash position and history, it can comfortably afford to do this.
    • Second, competition: Airbnb is unopposed in its space.
    • This is critical because it means that there is no one breathing down its neck forcing it to cut its prices.
    • Instead, this will be governed by lessors and lessees and whether or not they are happy to swallow any increases in price that Airbnb decides to make.
    • This is a very different scenario to Uber and Lyft who are constantly at each other’s throats and WeWork whose clients can up and leave with plenty of other options to choose from.
    • Third, revenue: Airbnb is currently around a $1bn run rate per quarter and should the new investments begin to pay off, this should start to grow more quickly.
    • This shows that Airbnb is already a bigger company than WeWork which will make it easier to stomach the current valuation of $31bn.
  • The net result is that Airbnb is in a much better financial position to begin thinking about IPO as it can point at its history and say with credibility that it can make money.
  • This will give investors much more comfort around a period of losses while the company invests in the next phase of its growth which makes a successful IPO much more likely.
  • Airbnb is no WeWork but the sins of its predecessors mean that it will be a sceptical and value-sensitive crowd that it has to sell itself to when it comes to IPO.
  • There is nothing wrong with the company at all and so a successful IPO will all be about the valuation.

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.