Yahoo Inc: New management has finally accepted what the markets have
been trying to discount for some time; that with Jerry Wang’s legacy
investments in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan, Yahoo was beginning to look like
an investment trust. New CEO, Marissa Marr’s decision to split off the
remaining (15.4%) stake in Alibaba into a new investment holding company therefore
will provide investors with greater clarity on the value of this
holding, albeit in itself, it does not alter the current value
proposition for Yahoo shareholders. The headline from Yahoo may
advertise that the manoeuvre will be “tax free”, but what this really
means is that the tax liability is merely being transferred into a new
bucket rather than being avoided. If the Alibaba stake was being
discounted for this tax liability within Yahoo therefore, there ought to
be no reason to assume that the discount will no longer apply when it
is within the new vehicle. Perhaps we should have taken heed of the
working name being given to this new company, “SpinCo”!. In the
meantime, Ms Marr’s transformation of the core Yahoo business is
proceeding slowly. Mobile revenues are rising rapidly (so what’s new?),
but this has yet to translate into a turnaround in either Yahoo’s
revenue or EBITDA trajectories which continue to erode. The markets need
a healthy competitor in search to Google and will no doubt continue to
wish Yahoo well, although the shuffling of its pack of investments can
only distract attention for a limited duration before markets return to
question this disparity in the implied growth rate being priced into the
core business versus the limited delivery.
Trading
Q4 FY14: After Q3’s excitement with the Alibaba listing and IPO gain,
Yahoo’s Q4 returned to the more mundane job of running the core business
where YoY revenue growth slipped from Q3’s +1% to a -1% YoY decline
(probably mainly fx) and adj EBITDA fell by -14% to $409m (-13% to
$1,362m for FY14; but -26% to $941m post stock comp). For Q4, revenues
excl TAC declined by -2% to $1,179m, o/w search was flat at $462m (incl
paid clicks +10% but price per click -7%) and display declined by -5% to
$462m. Post stock comp, net income was down by -52%, partially recouped
at the EPS line (-48% YoY from $0.33 to $0.17) due to the further
contraction in share base (-7% YoY), while the adj EPS figure declined
by -35% YoY from $0.46 to $0.30.
Outlook Q1 FY15: Co
is guiding for revenues of $1,110m/$1,150m (vs $1,133m), revenues excl
TAC of $1,020m/$1,060m (vs $1,087m), adj EBITDA of $200m/$240m (vs
$306m) and adj operating income of $50m/$90m (vs $149m).
Note
*1: Q3 results provided greater clarity on the potential gains tax
liability on the groups holding in Alibaba with an estimated $3.28bn of
tax due on the $10.32bn of realised gain at the recent IPO, an effective
rate of 32%. The group has not clarified whether this potential gain
liability on the Alibaba book value will be affected by its transfer to
an investment company holding structure.
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