Advertisement

Twitter’s next challenge: Keeping its stock in flight, making money

Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, center, and Mike Gupta, chief financial officer of Twitter, wait for shares to begin trading during the IPO, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, center, and Mike Gupta, chief financial officer of Twitter, wait for shares to begin trading during the IPO, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. AP Photo/Richard Drew

NEW YORK – Twitter’s stock took to its wings in its public debut, closing up more than 70 per cent. The day flew by with nary a hitch and gave birth to a new batch of Silicon Valley millionaires — even a few billionaires.

Now comes the hard part. With Twitter’s value skyrocketing in just a day, the 7-year-old company that’s never turned a profit and has just a fraction of Facebook’s user base must prove to investors that it’s worth the money. Twitter stock ended Thursday’s trading at $44.90, giving the company a market value of $31 billion. That’s $13 billion more than on Wednesday night, when the company set its IPO price at $26.

READ MORE: Twitter surges in opening trade on NYSE

“Ultimately what you want is a nice pop,” said Roger Entner of Recon Analytics. “Everyone walks away with smiles from ear to ear.”

Story continues below advertisement

Twitter, he added, “now just has to deliver on all this.”

By the closing bell, the social network that reinvented global communication in 140-character bursts was worth nearly as much as Yahoo Inc., an Internet icon from another era, and only slightly less than Kraft Foods, the grocery conglomerate founded more than a century ago.

Video: Twitter makes a big bang on the New York Stock Exchange, but will it make any profit? Brian Mooar reports.

Click to play video: 'Twitter surges in opening trade on NYSE'
Twitter surges in opening trade on NYSE

The stock’s sizzling performance seemed to affirm the bright prospects for Internet companies, especially those focused on mobile users. And it could invite more entrepreneurs to consider IPOs, which lost their lustre after Facebook’s 2012 public debut was marred by technical glitches. In Silicon Valley, Twitter’s IPO produced millionaires and billionaires, some of whom are sure to fund a new generation of startups.

Story continues below advertisement

Twitter worked hard to temper expectations ahead of the IPO. All that was swiftly forgotten with the stock’s opening surge.

Financial news and insights delivered to your email every Saturday.

But the excitement may not last. The company isn’t expected to turn a profit until 2015. That could be a long wait for investors, especially if Twitter’s revenue growth slows. There are already signs that its user growth is decelerating.

By Thursday’s close, Twitter was valued at close to 48 times its projected 2013 revenue of $650 million. In comparison, Facebook trades at about 16 times its projected 2013 revenue, according to analyst forecasts from FactSet.

Google Inc., meanwhile, is trading at about 7 times its net revenue, a figure Wall Street follows that excludes ad commissions.

Twitter’s stock looks so expensive to Brian Wieser of Pivotal Research that the analyst downgraded his rating on the stock to “sell” from “buy” on Thursday morning. While his overall view of the company’s prospects remained positive, Wieser thinks the high $20s or low $30s is a more reasonable range.

Twitter, Wieser added, faces a slew of risks in the coming months, including the possibility that it will need more money beyond its IPO proceeds to fund its business.

Twitter raised $1.8 billion Wednesday night when it sold 70 million shares to select investors for $26 each. Had it priced the stock at $30, for instance, the company would have taken away $2.1 billion. At $35, it would have reaped nearly $2.5 billion.

Story continues below advertisement

READ MORE: Going public: How Twitter’s IPO will work

But Twitter was purposely conservative in its approach. The most anticipated initial public offering of the year was carefully orchestrated to avoid the glitches and letdown that surrounded Facebook’s first appearance on the Nasdaq 18 months ago.

Trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “TWTR,” shares opened at $45.10, 73 per cent above their initial offering price. In the first few hours, the stock jumped as high as $50.09. Most of those gains held throughout the day, with Twitter closing at $44.90, despite a broader market decline.

The narrow price range indicated that people felt it was “pretty fairly priced,” said JJ Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade.

Named after the sound of a chirping bird, Twitter’s origins date back to 2005, when creators Noah Glass and Evan Williams were trying to get people to sign up for Odeo, a podcasting service they created. Odeo didn’t make it.

By early 2006, Glass and fellow Odeo programmer Jack Dorsey began work on a new project: teaming with co-worker Christopher “Biz” Stone on a way to corral text messages typically sent over a phone.

It was Glass who came up with the original name Twttr. The two vowels were added later. The first tweets were sent on March 21, 2006.

Story continues below advertisement

By 2007, Twitter was incorporated with Dorsey as the original CEO and Williams as chairman. Dorsey and Williams would eventually swap roles. Both remain major shareholders, though neither runs the company. Glass, meanwhile, was effectively erased from Twitter’s history, writes New York Times reporter Nick Bilton in “Hatching Twitter: A true story of money, power, friendship, and betrayal.”

Since those early days, the site has attracted world leaders, religious figures and celebrities, along with CEOs, businesses and countless marketers and self-promoters.

The company avoided the trouble that plagued Facebook’s IPO, which suffered technical glitches. As a result, the Securities and Exchange Commission fined Nasdaq $10 million, the largest ever levied against an exchange.

The glitches had lasting consequences for Facebook, which closed just 23 cents above its $38 IPO price on that first day and later fell much lower. The stock needed more than a year to climb back above $38. Those problems likely led Twitter to the NYSE.

Research firm Outsell Inc. puts Twitter’s fundamental value at about half of the IPO price, said analyst Ken Doctor. That figure is based on factors such as revenue and revenue growth.

“That’s not unusual,” Doctor said. “Especially for tech companies. You are betting on a big future.”

As a newly public company, one of Twitter’s biggest challenges will be to generate more revenue outside the U.S.

Story continues below advertisement

More than three-quarters of Twitter’s 232 million users are outside the U.S. But only 26 per cent of Twitter’s revenue comes from abroad. The company has said that it plans to hire more sales representatives in countries such as Australia, Brazil and Ireland.

– AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco and AP Markets Writer Ken Sweet in New York contributed to this story.

Sponsored content

AdChoices