Twitter, racing toward the largest Silicon Valley IPO since Facebook's 2012 coming-out party, hopes to woo investors with rip-roaring revenue growth despite having posted big losses over the past three years.
The eight-year-old online messaging service, which last week announced it would double the size of its Dublin office, gave potential investors their first glance at its financials yesterday when it publicly filed its IPO document.
Twitter’s target is to raise $1 billion, a figure devised mainly for registration purposes and that will change as the company embarks on a roadshow to sell its IPO to investors.
Twitter’s debut will be the culmination of its journey from a side-project to a sociocultural phenomenon, one that has become a communications channel for everyone from the Pope to US president Barack Obama. Last month, Iranian president Hassan Rouhani used Twitter to disclose a “historic” phone conversation with the US president.
The service's emphasis on real-time communication - whether it be about breaking news or chatting with friends about a TV show on air - sets it apart from rivals such as Facebook.
Now, though, the company must prove to Wall Street it can continue to make money, even as growth slows after a period of explosive expansion around the world.
In yesterday’s filing, the first public disclosure of financial figures, Twitter reported that revenue almost tripled to $316.9 million in 2012. In the first half of 2013, it posted revenue of $253.6 million but had a loss of $69.3 million.
The numbers were mostly in line with the estimates of outside analysts. The company began selling advertising in earnest only in 2010, devising a means for ads to appear in the message streams of users that has proven effective for both desktop computers and mobile devices.
The losses are “a non-issue,” said Brian Wieser, analyst at Pivotal Research Group. “It would have been a surprise if they had a profit.”
In the laundry list of risk factors that’s typically appended to all company IPO filings, Twitter warned it was heavily reliant on advertising revenue. It said more than 87 per cent of its revenue came from advertising in the first half of 2013.
The prices Twitter can command for ads has actually fallen over the past five quarters. But the company said that decline was the result of a conscious effort to rapidly expand its available inventory and change its algorithms to distribute ads more frequently throughout each day.
Revenue has risen because the strategy attracted more advertisers, especially small- and medium-sized businesses and international clients, it said.
Still, the company acknowledged the uncertainty of the volatile and highly competitive online advertising market.
“Advertisers will not continue to do business with us, or they will reduce the prices they are willing to pay to advertise with us, if we do not deliver ads in an effective manner, or if they do not believe that their investment in advertising with us will generate a competitive return relative to alternatives, including online, mobile.”
Assuming everything goes smoothly, Twitter could begin trading in November, though it has not revealed which US exchange - the New York Stock Exchange or the Nasdaq - it has chosen.
Wherever it lists, its debut is likely to cause waves across Wall Street and the industry, potentially breathing new life into the market for consumer internet companies and influencing the value of all social media companies.
Some analysts estimate Twitter could be worth as much as $15 billion. That’s a fraction what Facebook was worth at the time of its debut, but Twitter’s profile is just as high.
Indeed, its more established rival is borrowing a few pages from Twitter's book, particularly in its approach to mobile advertising. Yesterday it announced an advertising initiative for its Instagram unit, which competes most directly with Twitter.
Since Twitter was spun out of a struggling San Francisco startup in 2006, it has grown to approximately 2,000 employees based in 15 offices around the world. It announced in 2011 it would open an office in Dublin.
Along the way, it helped create new ways for advertisers and corporations to reach audiences, from a “promoted tweets” model now replicated by Facebook and other internet platforms, to its “second screen” approach to encouraging real-time debate around television programs.
More importantly, it has helped redefine the nature of global communications, linking once lofty and unreachable politicians, celebrities and journalists with millions around the world.
Its staunch advocacy of free speech around the world - nothing other than direct personal threats are barred from Twitter - has helped it become an important avenue through which news and viewpoints are shared, from the first inklings of the US military assault on Osama bin Laden’s compound to Obama’s tweeting “Four more years” when he won re-election.
Twitter’s IPO has already drawn multiple comparisons to Facebook. When the world’s largest social network debuted, concerns centered around its inability to fully earn revenue off mobile users.
Twitter appears to have less of an issue with mobile. About 65 per cent of its revenue derives from mobile users, it said.
The service had 218.3 million monthly active users, on average, in the three months ended June 30th. Three-quarters of its monthly active users are considered mobile users, it said in the filing.
But Twitter managed only average revenue per user in the second quarter of 2013 of 64 cents compared to Facebook’s roughly $1.60, according to Reuters’ calculations.
Investors can still muster some cheer from Facebook’s revenue and profitability track. The social networking site pulled in $272 million in revenue in 2008 but lost $55 million, according to Facebook’s S-1 document. In 2009, it swung to a profit of $262 million after increasing its revenue nearly three-fold to $777 million. Facebook is now solidly profitable.
Twitter, which went through a period of management turmoil and internal strife in its early years, did not append a letter from the founders to the filing, unlike internet companies such as Facebook and Google before it.
Co-founder and former CEO Evan Williams is Twitter's largest shareholder, with 12 percent of the shares, while co-founder and chairman Jack Dorsey owns 4.9 percent. Biz Williams, another co-founder, does not appear on the list of top shareholders. Current CEO Dick Costolo owns 1.6 per cent.
Among institutions, Benchmark and affiliated entities own 6.7 per cent of shares, while Rizvi Traverse Management, Spark Capital, Union Square Ventures and DST Global are each shareholders of 5 per cent or more.
Suhail Rizvi, the little-known head of Rizvi Traverse who has helped himself and his investors amass stakes in Twitter since 2011, would count among the largest institutional shareholders, according to sources familiar with its investments.
Twitter intends to list common stock under the symbol “TWTR.” Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, BofA Merrill Lynch, Allen & Co, Deutsche Bank Securities and Code Advisors are managing Twitter’s IPO.