Tag Archives: Peloton Interactive

Peloton Co-Founder John Foley Faced Repeated Margin Calls From Goldman Sachs as Stock Slumped

John Foley,

the co-founder and former chief executive of

Peloton Interactive Inc.,

PTON -3.41%

faced repeated margin calls on money he borrowed against his Peloton holdings before he left the fitness company’s board last month, according to people familiar with the situation.

As Peloton’s shares slumped over the past year,

Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

GS -2.11%

asked Mr. Foley several times to provide fresh funds or additional collateral for personal loans the bank had extended to him, the people said. The company’s share price has fallen nearly 95% from its $160 peak in December 2020.

Resigning from the board gave Mr. Foley flexibility to sell or pledge more Peloton shares, though he said the margin calls weren’t the reason he left the company.

“I didn’t resign from the board because I was underwater,” he said. “To the extent that I took on debt through Goldman, it was because I am bullish on Peloton and still am. It was and is a great company.”

The former chairman and CEO had pledged as collateral about 3.5 million Peloton shares as of the end of September 2021, or about 20% of his stake at the time, securities filings show. The pledged shares were worth more than $300 million a year ago. At current prices, they are worth roughly $30 million.

Peloton has cut thousands of jobs this year to stem its losses.



Photo:

John Smith/VIEWpress/Getty Images

Mr. Foley was able to secure private financing and avoid stock sales by Goldman, the people said. He declined to say on Monday how much of his current stake had been pledged or how much he had borrowed against his holdings.

His seat on the board limited his ability to raise additional funds because most public companies prohibit directors and executives from selling their shares during certain trading periods. In addition, Peloton’s policy limits pledges for margin loans by directors or executives to 40% of the value of an individual’s shares or vested options.

Mr. Foley’s decision to leave the board on Sept. 12 followed a tumultuous several months at the company he co-founded a decade ago, as well as a sharp decline in his personal wealth as Peloton’s sagging fortunes diminished the value of his holdings. His stake in the company, worth $1.5 billion a year ago, is currently worth less than $100 million.

“Everyone can see I had a rocky year,” Mr. Foley said. “This was not a fun personal balance-sheet reset.”

Barry McCarthy, a Silicon Valley veteran, became Peloton’s CEO in February.



Photo:

Angela Owens/The Wall Street Journal

In February, Mr. Foley stepped down as Peloton’s CEO and was succeeded by

Barry McCarthy,

a former

Netflix Inc.

and Spotify Technology SA executive. Mr. Foley kept his position as Peloton’s executive chairman and continued to hold a controlling stake in the company through Class B shares with 20 votes apiece.

A few weeks later, Mr. Foley reported selling $50 million worth of Peloton shares in a private transaction. At the time, Peloton said the sale was part of the executive’s personal financial planning. The sale left him and his wife,

Jill Foley,

a former Peloton executive, with 6.6 million shares and options on another 8.4 million, according to securities filings, which combined are currently worth less than $100 million. He hasn’t reported any stock or option sales since March. Business Insider reported in March that Mr. Foley was in discussions with Goldman about restructuring his personal loans.

Peloton’s business deteriorated throughout the spring and summer, with the company in August reporting a $1.2 billion loss and the first ever quarter in which its subscriber numbers failed to grow. The company has cut thousands of jobs this year to stem its losses, including a round of layoffs unveiled last week.

Mr. Foley’s 10-year tenure as CEO was marked by rapid growth and sometimes lavish spending. He took heat from Peloton employees last December for hosting a black-tie holiday party that included some of the company’s celebrity instructors weeks after implementing a hiring freeze. Pictures circulated on Instagram of gown-clad instructors dancing at New York’s luxury Plaza Hotel. Mr. Foley acknowledged on social media that the event caused “frustration and angst” among employees.

Peloton has been on a wild ride, announcing its CEO was stepping down and thousands of jobs would be cut, despite seeing a surge in sales early in the pandemic. Here’s why Peloton became a viral success, and why it’s spinning out now. Photo illustration: Jacob Reynolds

That same month, Mr. Foley paid $55 million to purchase an oceanfront mansion in East Hampton, N.Y., according to real-estate records and people familiar with the transaction. He and Ms. Foley in September put their Manhattan penthouse up for sale. The property, last priced at $6.5 million, is in contract to be sold, according to listings website StreetEasy.

Margin loans, or borrowing against portfolios of stocks and bonds, come with the risk that a broker can call for additional cash or collateral to meet the minimum equity required if a security’s price drops too low. Sharp drops in stock prices during the 2000 dot-com burst and the 2008 financial crisis generated margin calls for executives at well-known companies.

John Foley paid $55 million to purchase this oceanfront mansion in East Hampton, N.Y.



Photo:

PICTOMETRY

Peloton requires directors, executives and employees to get approval for pledging their shares as collateral for margin loans. Other Peloton executives also have pledged some of their Class B holdings, and in the annual report Peloton filed last month, the company warned that investors could be harmed if its stock fell and executives were forced to sell shares.

Goldman has worked closely with Peloton, including when Mr. Foley was the CEO. The investment bank was one of the lead underwriters of the company’s initial public offering in 2019. Goldman bankers also co-led a $1 billion stock offering in November 2021.

Investors initially soured on Peloton—its shares fell 11% the day they made their debut at $29. The stock surged in 2020 during the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, giving the company a peak market value of $50 billion and making Mr. Foley a billionaire on paper. The shares closed down 3.4% Tuesday at $8.78.

and Katherine Clarke contributed to this article.

Write to Sharon Terlep at sharon.terlep@wsj.com and Suzanne Vranica at suzanne.vranica@wsj.com

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Peloton’s Quarterly Loss Tops $1.2 Billion

Peloton Interactive Inc.,

PTON -19.32%

racing to save itself, will reject some of the most fundamental aspects of its decade-old business model. 

The once-hot maker of connected fitness equipment posted losses of more than $1.2 billion in the most recent quarter as revenue plunged and the company warned it would spend more cash than it brings in for several more months. Peloton lost $2.8 billion in the year ended June 30, compared with a $189 million loss in the prior year.

Losses come as demand for Peloton’s bikes and treadmills has plunged and the company’s count of people who subscribe to its fitness classes stagnated after growing fourfold since early 2020. The company had about 3 million subscribers to its connected fitness offering at the end of the June quarter.

Peloton CEO Barry McCarthy aims to make Peloton primarily a subscription-based company.



Photo:

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Peloton shares were down nearly 20% in morning trading, as the company posted steeper losses and weaker revenue than analysts had projected. Through Wednesday’s close, its share price was down 88% from a year ago.

“The naysayers will look at our [fourth-quarter] financial performance and see a melting pot of declining revenue, negative gross margin, and deeper operating losses. They will say these threaten the viability of the business,” Chief Executive

Barry McCarthy

said in a letter to shareholders. “But what I see is significant progress driving our comeback and Peloton’s long-term resilience.”

Peloton has long sought out an affluent base of customers with stationary bikes that cost up to $2,500, and has worked to ensure only owners of its equipment are able to connect to its popular workout classes.

Mr. McCarthy, who took over in February, said the company also will court more frugal customers and make its workout classes, often accessed through screens on Peloton equipment, compatible with competitors’ exercise products.

He said the company is also trying to bring more people in through selling equipment and clothes through Amazon.com Inc.’s e-commerce platform to letting people rent bikes through a subscription. Peloton historically has offered two subscription options, one in which courses connect to bikes and treadmills and cheaper options in which classes aren’t connected.   

“You never know which initiative is going to get us where we want to go, but I am confident of the cumulative effect,” Mr. McCarthy said in a call with analysts. 

The efforts come as Peloton’s finances deteriorate. 

Revenue for the June quarter fell to $679 million, a nearly 30% drop from a year ago as declining exercise equipment sales more than offset higher revenue from subscriptions. 

Efforts to restructure the company contributed to it burning through $412 million in cash in the latest quarter, after going through $650 million in each of the prior two periods. It ended June with $1.25 billion in cash reserves and a $500 million credit line. 

Peloton is taking steps to shore up its finances, from sweeping layoffs to outsourcing manufacturing of its fitness equipment. The company said earlier this month it would cut around 800 jobs in an effort to reduce costs, after announcing in February it would lay off about 2,800 workers. Executives said cost-cutting aims to ensure the company maintains at least $1 billion in available cash.

One of the pandemic’s biggest winners, Peloton has struggled to adapt as Americans revert to prepandemic habits and tighten spending amid inflation near its highest level in decades. Americans are spending less on in-home fitness, from sales of equipment to connected workouts, as they return in droves to gyms and become increasingly cautious about spending available cash amid economic uncertainty.

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Mr. McCarthy’s predecessor, Peloton co-founder

John Foley,

spent hundreds of millions of dollars to expand the company’s manufacturing and supply, betting that demand would hold as the pandemic waned. Along with replacing Mr. Foley, the company earlier this year made changes to its board and said it would cancel plans for a $400 million factory in Ohio.

For the first time, in the most recent quarter, Peloton’s subscription revenues were greater than equipment sales. Mr. McCarthy, who previously worked at

Spotify Technology SA

and

Netflix Inc.

, aims to make Peloton primarily a subscription-based company. Subscriber revenue for the quarter was $383 million; equipment sales were $296 million. 

Peloton’s subscriber count rose by just 4,000 in the quarter ended June 30 and the company predicts that the total number of subscribers will remain flat in the current quarter.

It is a big change from the start of 2021, when Peloton’s quarterly revenue peaked at $1.2 billion, and exercise equipment comprised more than 80% of sales. 

The company said it expects total revenue between $625 million and $650 million for the current quarter, which ends Sept. 30.

Mr. McCarthy, in his investor letter, likened Peloton to a dangerously tipping cargo ship he was aboard as a high-schooler when the crew managed a dramatic recovery.

“Peloton is like that cargo ship,” he said. “We’ve sounded the alarm for general quarters. Everyone’s at their station.”

Write to Sharon Terlep at sharon.terlep@wsj.com

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Peloton Swaps Out Finance Chief as It Navigates Persistent Losses

Peloton Interactive Inc.

is exchanging its top finance executive about four months after it named a new chief executive, a move that comes as the fitness-equipment maker navigates persistent losses.

The New York-based at-home exercise equipment company on Monday said

Liz Coddington

will serve as its chief financial officer, effective June 13. Peloton said its current CFO,

Jill Woodworth,

decided to leave after more than four years with the company.

Peloton said Ms. Woodworth will remain with the company as a consultant on an interim basis to help prepare the fiscal year 2022 financial results.

Ms. Coddington most recently served as vice president of finance for Amazon Web Services, an

Amazon.com Inc.

subsidiary that provides on-demand cloud computing platforms. Before that, she held CFO and leadership finance roles at companies including retailer

Walmart Inc.

and streaming business

Netflix Inc.

Ms. Coddington joins Peloton as the company is dealing with waning demand from consumers after facing issues around its ability to meet orders, which soared during the early stages of the pandemic. The surge in demand for Peloton bikes led the company to break ground on a million-square-foot factory in Wood County, Ohio, last year.

Peloton is now looking to sell the factory that it will never use. The company also slashed prices for its equipment, projected slower growth and had to borrow $750 million to fund its operations.

Peloton in May reported its largest quarterly loss since the company went public in 2019, reporting a net loss of $757.1 million for the quarter ended March 31, compared with a loss of $8.6 million in the prior-year period.

In February, Peloton replaced Chief Executive

John Foley

with

Barry McCarthy,

who previously led the finances of digital music service

Spotify Technology SA

and Netflix. The company also cut 2,800 jobs amid reduced demand for its exercise equipment. Mr. Foley was closely associated with the company’s growth phase after its public offering and the revenue surge early in the pandemic.

The change in the CFO-seat makes sense given the continuing restructuring under Mr. McCarthy, said

Rohit Kulkarni,

managing director at equity trading and research firm MKM Partners LLC.

“As the new CEO puts his mark on the organization’s structure and aligns it with where he wants the company to go, these changes are not completely surprising,” he said.

With Peloton’s fiscal year ending June 30, Ms. Coddington will very quickly be “under a bigger investor microscope,” as the expectation is that the company will release fiscal year guidance soon after she joins, Mr. Kulkarni said. “It will be a challenging task to provide that new guidance.”

Write to Jennifer Williams-Alvarez at jennifer.williams-alvarez@wsj.com and Mark Maurer at Mark.Maurer@wsj.com

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Lyft to Pause Some Hiring and Trim Budgets, Citing Economic Slowdown

Lyft Inc.

LYFT -17.27%

will slow hiring, reduce the budgets of some of its departments and grant new stock options to some employees to make up for its eroding share price, joining rival

Uber Technologies Inc.

UBER -9.38%

in outlining cuts as investor optimism cools on tech stocks.

President

John Zimmer

announced the measures Tuesday in a memo to staff.

“It’s clear from our discussions with other business leaders that every company is taking a hard look at how they respond to concerns about an economic slowdown and the dramatic change in investor sentiment,” Mr. Zimmer wrote in an internal memo viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

“Given the slower than expected recovery and need to accelerate leverage in the business, we’ve made the difficult but important decision to significantly slow hiring in the US,” he said.

That includes the company giving priority to fewer initiatives, not filling many of the current open roles and focusing hiring on roles deemed critical, such as those that support its core rides business, Mr. Zimmer said. He said there are no layoffs planned.

Lyft’s board met on Friday to discuss the cuts, said a person familiar with the meeting. Lyft began signaling to some employees recently that there would be a hiring slowdown and cutting of budgets, another person familiar said.

Lyft shares have lost more than 60% since the start of the year, more than double the decline of the Nasdaq Composite Index. After declining more than 15% Tuesday, Lyft shares were up less than 1.5% in after-hours trading after the Journal reported about the plans.

Uber Technologies also has outlined budget cuts. An Uber driver in Paris.



Photo:

Nathan Laine/Bloomberg News

Tech companies that powered the U.S. economy during the pandemic are suffering through a punishing stretch. Concerns about rising interest rates and the reversal of some pandemic trends that bolstered tech revenues have hit the share prices of

Peloton Interactive Inc.,

PTON -8.08%

Netflix Inc.,

Amazon.com Inc.

AMZN -3.21%

and others.

Last month Amazon reported the slowest quarterly revenue growth in about two decades. Netflix lost subscribers during its first quarter for the first time in more than a decade and signaled that losses are set to continue.

Apple Inc.

AAPL -1.92%

cautioned that the resurgence of Covid-19 in China could hinder sales.

The shares of

Snap Inc.

SNAP -43.08%

tumbled 43% Tuesday after it said in a Monday filing that revenue and adjusted pretax earnings for the second quarter will come in below the range the company projected barely a month ago due to weak advertising revenues. Other tech stocks that rely on digital advertising, including Google parent

Alphabet Inc.

GOOG -5.14%

and

Facebook

parent

Meta Platforms Inc.,

FB -7.62%

also fell.

After years of adding jobs at a rapid pace, some tech companies have been broadcasting that they think it is time to take a more cautious approach. The pullback by tech giants raises questions about the direction of the overall U.S. job market and economy.

Meta, Peloton and Uber are among the tech companies that have announced they will slow hiring or re-evaluate their head count in recent weeks.

Among the other issues cooling the long-hot sector: inflation, labor shortages and supply-chain issues.

Uber and Lyft are struggling with a year-long driver shortage that has pushed fares to record highs. The elevated fares have partly resulted in fewer Lyft riders and fewer Uber trips compared with before the health crisis, though both companies’ first-quarter revenue outpaced prepandemic levels on the back of higher prices.

Lyft’s first-quarter results were overshadowed by a weaker-than-expected earnings outlook as the company said it would need to spend more money to incentivize drivers to return. Its stock tumbled more than 35% after the announcement, marking the biggest percentage drop in a single day since the company went public in 2019.

Earlier this month, Uber said it would cut spending on marketing and scale back on hiring as it focuses on turning a profit.

Both companies spent big for years to gain customers and market share. But their 2019 public offerings disappointed, with Wall Street increasingly wanting to see money-losing companies turn a profit.

“As we’ve seen and discussed, public market investors have continued to sharply shift their focus onto a potential recession and a company’s ability to deliver near-term profits,” Mr. Zimmer wrote in Tuesday’s memo.

He went on to write that “our near-term action plan will be focused on accelerating profits—whether we like it or not, that’s the ticket of entry in today’s market.”

Uber and Lyft have trimmed their losses, unloading costly divisions such as their self-driving units and cutting staff during the health crisis. Both companies turned a quarterly adjusted profit before certain expenses like interest, taxes and depreciation last year.

Uber said it expects to be cash-flow positive on a full-year basis this year. If it meets that goal, it would mark the first time the underlying operations of the ride-share and food-delivery giant generate more money than it spends.

Write to Preetika Rana at preetika.rana@wsj.com and Emily Glazer at emily.glazer@wsj.com

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A Peloton Bike and Subscription for One Monthly Fee? Company to Test New Price Plans

Peloton Interactive Co.

PTON -5.33%

’s new chief executive is looking to overhaul the stationary-bike maker’s pricing strategy in a bid to turn around the company.

The company on Friday will start testing a new pricing system in which customers pay a single monthly fee that covers both the namesake stationary bike and a monthly subscription to workout courses. If a customer cancels, Peloton would take back the bike with no charge.

Select Peloton stores in Texas, Florida, Minnesota and Denver will for a limited period offer a bike and subscription for between $60 and $100 a month, an experiment that aims to find a price proposition that will help return Peloton to profitability without crippling growth.

If adopted, the model would be a major shift for Peloton, which built a business around selling high-price, screen-equipped stationary bikes alongside $39-per-month subscriptions to its connected workout classes. The idea: sell Peloton as a fitness service that can be canceled anytime rather than as a major purchase with a subscription attached.

“There is no value in sitting around negotiating what the outcome will be,”

Barry McCarthy,

who last month replaced co-founder

John Foley

as CEO, said in an interview. “Let’s get in the market and let the customer tell us what works.”

Along with a pricing overhaul, Mr. McCarthy, the 68-year-old former finance chief of

Netflix Inc.

and

Spotify Technology SA,

said he plans to reshape his executive team, consider manufacturing simpler bikes, and upend the company’s capital spending strategy. Rather than investing primarily in bikes, treadmills and other equipment, he said, Peloton will spend most of its money improving its digital interface and content options.

He said inventors that control 70% of voting shares of Peloton, including Mr. Foley, have agreed to put off any discussions around selling the company while he executes his turnaround plan. Mr. Foley still controls around 35% of voting power even after selling about $150 million worth of his shares in the company since the start of 2021, said Ben Silverman, director of research at InsiderScore. That voting power is because of his holdings of Class B shares, which entitle holders to 20 votes a share.

Initially one the pandemic’s biggest success stories, New York-based Peloton has lowered its revenue forecasts for several quarters in a row and has said it would cut roughly 20% of its corporate positions to help cope with widening losses as demand cools.

The $39-a-month subscription price has existed essentially since Peloton’s inception. In recent years, the company has lowered the cost of its bikes and treadmills, either by cutting prices or offering cheaper options. A Peloton bike in 2020 cost $2,495; now the cheapest model is $1,495, not including a delivery charge.

CEO Barry McCarthy said a different pricing system could draw new customers and make the business more profitable.



Photo:

brendan mcdermid/Reuters

Under the test program, people get a Peloton and a membership that includes access to all its courses for a single monthly fee, with the ability to cancel anytime. The offers would be available through Peloton stores, or studios, and not online. Subscribers would pay a nonrefundable delivery fee.

Mr. McCarthy said a different pricing system could draw new customers and make the business more profitable.

His predecessor, Mr. Foley, argued that Covid was only the beginning of Americans’ shift to online, connected fitness. Based on that assumption, Mr. Foley dramatically increased the company’s capacity, which proved to be well in excess of demand as legions of people returned to gyms and Peloton’s growth sputtered

That misstep, Mr. McCarthy said, led to Peloton’s current woes.

Now, he said, Peloton has to figure out how to tap new customers and make more money on each subscription, while reducing its reliance on bikes and treadmills to deliver profits.

Given Peloton’s ability to retain subscribers, Mr. McCarthy said, higher subscription rates carry big profit potential over time. Even at $39, Peloton subscriptions are hugely profitable, he said. He said he wants to employ models that succeeded at Spotify and Netflix and that Peloton has far higher retention rates than either of those companies.

“I’m a huge proponent of them charging more for subscriptions,” said BMO Capital Markets analyst Simeon Siegel. “But they need to internalize that that will hurt their brand and lower demand,” while making the company more profitable.

He said the fact that Peloton’s growth has slowed dramatically despite cutting the price of equipment casts doubt on whether any changes to the pricing model will win converts.

A Peloton spokeswoman said the ability of customers to cancel anytime differentiates the potential new model from previous price cuts.

Peloton has been on a wild ride, announcing its CEO was stepping down and thousands of jobs would be cut, despite seeing a surge in sales early in the pandemic. Here’s why Peloton became a viral success, and why it’s spinning out now. Photo illustration: Jacob Reynolds

Profitability of Peloton’s exercise equipment is sharply lower than it was before the pandemic, as the company struggles with higher production and logistics costs and excess capacity.

Equipment sales have been vital because the physical machines, while more costly to make, generate more than twice as much revenue as subscriptions, UBS analyst Arpiné Kocharyan said.

Equipment sales have funded Peloton’s ballooning marketing spending up until now, Ms. Kocharyan said. “If you are going to get out of the product business, who is going to pay for that sales and marketing?” she said.

Mr. McCarthy said it isn’t yet clear the role Peloton machines will play in the company’s future. He said roughly 80% of capital spending goes toward equipment, with the rest spent on software. That should be reversed, he said.

Among potential offerings he thinks Peloton should look at developing: its own social-media platform, more seamless ways for members to interact and compete with each other during classes, and partnerships that could land Peloton classes on other devices, or allow outside content to stream on Peloton’s screens.

At the moment, Mr. McCarthy said, Peloton will fervently market test, a strategy more reliable than focus groups and consumer surveys. Netflix also did market tests to see what caused subscribers to ditch the service or keep it, he said.

There isn’t much middle ground between success and failure, he said.

“Either I’m going to leave here successfully,” he said, “or I’m going to leave with a greatly diminished reputation.”

Write to Sharon Terlep at sharon.terlep@wsj.com

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Peloton CEO John Foley to Step Down, Firm to Cut 2,800 Jobs

Peloton Interactive Inc.

PTON 20.93%

plans to replace its chief executive, cut costs and overhaul its board after a slowdown in demand caused the once-hot bike maker’s value to plummet.

Peloton co-founder

John Foley,

who has led the company for its entire 10-year existence, is stepping down as CEO and will become executive chairman, the company told The Wall Street Journal.

Barry McCarthy,

the former chief financial officer of

Spotify Technology SA

and

Netflix Inc.,

will become CEO and president and join Peloton’s board.

The New York company will also cut roughly 2,800 jobs, affecting 20% of its corporate positions, to help cope with the drop-off in demand and widening losses. The cuts won’t affect Peloton’s instructor roster or content.

A little over two weeks ago, activist investor Blackwells Capital LLC called for Peloton to fire Mr. Foley and explore a sale of the company, which the Journal has reported is attracting potential suitors including Amazon.com Inc.

Blackwells reiterated its call Tuesday, saying Mr. Foley should leave the company entirely rather than become executive chairman. The company also released a 65-page presentation in which it estimated a sale could value Peloton above $65 a share. Peloton shares closed Monday at $29.75.

“We are open to exploring any opportunity that could create value for Peloton shareholders,” Mr. Foley said in an interview prior to Blackwells’s Tuesday release. Mr. Foley, a former Barnes & Noble Inc. executive who co-founded Peloton 10 years ago last month, declined to comment further.

The naming of a new CEO could indicate that Peloton sees an independent future for itself, or at least doesn’t want to sell at the current depressed share price. Any deal would likely require Mr. Foley’s support, as he and other insiders have shares that gave them control of over 80% of Peloton’s voting power as of Sept. 30, according to a securities filing.

Former Spotify CFO Barry McCarthy said his strength is a deep understanding of content-driven subscription models.



Photo:

Michael Nagle/Bloomberg News

Once a pandemic darling as homebound customers ordered its exercise equipment and streamed its virtual classes and its valuation soared, Peloton’s fortunes have recently sagged, with its stock until recently trading below its September 2019 IPO price of $29 a share as lockdowns ease and gyms start to fill up again.

The company’s shares fell 2% in early Tuesday trading. The company confirmed news of the leadership changes and reported a second-quarter net loss of $439 million. Peloton also lowered its revenue forecast for its full fiscal year to a range of $3.7 billion to $3.8 billion, down from its prior range of $4.4 billion to $4.5 billion.

The company’s value has fallen from a high of around $50 billion roughly a year ago to around $8 billion last week, before its shares rose 21% Monday on news of potential suitors.

Peloton has said it was planning cost cuts and reviewing the size of its workforce and production levels. Investors have been awaiting details of its plans.

Messrs. Foley and McCarthy said that the company had long been planning to hire a new CEO and that Mr. McCarthy entered the picture in the past few weeks.

“I have always thought there has to be a better CEO for Peloton than me,” said Mr. Foley, 51. “Barry is more perfectly suited than anybody I could’ve imagined.”

Mr. McCarthy, who is in his late 60s and plans to move from California to New York, said his strength is a deep understanding of content-driven subscription models, while Mr. Foley’s is in product development and marketing.

“Together we can make a complete grown-up and build a really remarkable business,” Mr. McCarthy said. He has consulted for Peloton investor Technology Crossover Ventures, sits on the boards of Instacart Inc. and Spotify, and was CFO of the music-streaming service until early 2020.

Peloton is making other personnel changes:

William Lynch,

the company’s president, will step down from his executive role but remain on the board;

Erik Blachford,

a director since 2015, will leave the board; and two new directors will be added.

The new directors are

Angel Mendez,

who runs a private artificial-intelligence company focused on supply-chain management, and

Jonathan Mildenhall,

the former chief marketing officer of

Airbnb Inc.

and co-founder of branding company TwentyFirstCenturyBrand.

Peloton said it expects to cut roughly $800 million in annual costs and reduce capital expenditures by roughly $150 million this year. The company will wind down the development of its Peloton Output Park, the $400 million factory that it said in May it was building in Ohio, and reduce its delivery teams as well as the amount of warehouse space it owns and operates.

“Where the company got over its skis is it built out a cost structure as if Covid was the new normal,” Mr. McCarthy said.

Mr. Foley has said the company is acting to improve its profitability and would share details with earnings. The company reported preliminary second-quarter revenue of $1.14 billion and said it ended the period with 2.77 million subscribers.

Peloton’s Pandemic Rise and Fall

Write to Cara Lombardo at cara.lombardo@wsj.com

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Amazon, Nike, and Other Bidders Are Reportedly Circling Peloton

Photo: Scott Heins (Getty Images)

After enjoying a lockdown-fueled peak during the pandemic, Peloton is now spinning out of control. Product recalls, plummeting stock prices, a major decline in demand and its bike’s dangerous cameos in not one, but two primetime TV shows have wiped roughly $40 billion from its market value in the last year.

Now, corporations are reportedly lining up to bid on the beleaguered exercise equipment manufacturer, with Amazon being the latest among several “potential suitors” to throw its hat in the ring, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

According to people familiar with the matter that spoke with the outlet, Amazon has been talking to advisers about a potential acquisition. Additionally, Nike is evaluating the idea of making an offer, the Financial Times reports, though these considerations are in the preliminary stages and it has not yet spoken with Peloton. Several experts have floated Apple as a possible buyer for Peloton, but that also remains speculation.

Peloton hasn’t initiated a formal sales process at this time, but there has been ample interest from outsiders about acquiring the company, a person familiar with the talks told CNBC. Its share prices shot up by around 30% on Friday after the news broke that Amazon might be eyeing it.

Nike and Amazon did not immediately return Gizmodo’s request for comment. We’ll update this article with their response.

It’s not immediately clear how Amazon or Nike might incorporate Peloton’s technology or user base into their respective business models. A stronger argument can be made for the e-commerce giant though, as noted by the Journal. For one thing, Amazon’s logistics arm would be a serious boon amid Peloton’s ongoing supply chain issues. Not to mention that Amazon has a history of investing heavily in the health and wellness industry: It already has its own line of fitness bands, the Halo Band launched in 2020 and the Halo View that debuted in December, and scooped up Whole Foods for more than $13 billion in 2017.

Peloton’s existing subscription service could potentially be bundled with Amazon’s Prime membership program as well, something Amazon has done before with its previous acquisitions to pile on incentives for shoppers to sign up.

If Amazon does go through with the sale, Peloton’s offerings would become some of the most expensive hardware in its catalog. After Peloton hiked up delivery fees for some of its equipment earlier this year, the all-in price of its original stationary bike now stands at $1,745 while its treadmill retails for $2,845.

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Bitcoin, Netflix, Peloton, Coinbase: What to Watch When the Stock Market Opens Today

Stock futures are falling after disappointing earnings reports from some popular technology stocks. Here’s what we’re watching at the end of a rough week on Wall Street:

  • Bitcoin’s price fell below $40,000, and crypto stocks were dragged down with it.

    Coinbase

    COIN 0.97%

    dropped 5.6% ahead of the bell, and bitcoin miners

    Marathon Digital

    MARA -0.08%

    and

    Riot Blockchain

    RIOT -0.11%

    slid 7.8% and 8.7% respectively.

  • Netflix

    NFLX -1.48%

    plunged 19% premarket. The streaming giant said it expects to add a much smaller number of subscribers this quarter than it did a year ago as it adjusts to growing competition and lasting disruptions from the coronavirus pandemic. The bad news seemed to rub off on streaming-device maker Roku, which shed 4% premarket.

  • Peloton

    PTON -23.93%

    powered 5.5% higher premarket, but that only makes up a bit of Thursday’s 24% drop. The company is reviewing the size of its workforce and resetting production levels as it adapts to more seasonal demand for its exercise equipment.

A Peloton stationary bike at one of the fitness company’s studios in New York, Dec. 4, 2019.



Photo:

Scott Heins/Getty Images

  • Intel

    INTC -2.95%

    nudged down 0.2%. The company plans to invest at least $20 billion in new chip-making capacity in Ohio.

  • CSX

    CSX -0.03%

    fell 3.2%, though the railroad operator is projecting that shipping volume will rise faster than GDP this year and reported a slight earnings beat.

  • Ally Financial

    ALLY -0.02%

    shares slipped 2.4% premarket after it reported lower earnings per share during the recent quarter from a year prior.

  • Huntington Bancshares

    HBAN -2.51%

    ticked down 4.5% after it also reported a slight drop in earnings per share.

Chart of the Day
  • Europe’s tech scene has struggled to emerge from the shadows of giants in the U.S. and Asia, but friendly local policies and a global overflow of investment capital are now giving the region a gusher of cash.

Write to James Willhite at james.willhite@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Peloton, Nvidia, Airbnb, Expedia: What to Watch in the Stock Market Today

Futures ticked higher after jobs figures showed that hiring picked up in October and the unemployment rate fell. Here’s what we’re watching ahead of Friday’s opening bell:

  • Peloton Interactive shares went off the wheels, plunging 34% premarket. The maker of connected fitness equipment reported its smallest quarterly gain in subscriber growth since it became a public company two years ago, and said that fewer people are joining its online workouts.
  • Airbnb gained 5% ahead of the bell. The home-sharing company posted record revenue in the third quarter, punctuating its rebound from the collapse in bookings during the early days of the pandemic.
  • Nvidia added 2.1% premarket. Wells Fargo on Thursday lifted its price target for the stock, and it notched its best one-day performance in 19 months.
  • Pfizer shares climbed 12% after the drugmaker said a preliminary look at study results indicated that its experimental pill was highly effective at preventing people at high risk of severe Covid-19 from needing hospitalization or dying.
  • Expedia jumped 14% after the online travel agency turned a profit for the third quarter, driven by the performance of its Vrbo business, domestic travel and improvements across its lines of business.
  • Square dropped 3.9%. The payments firm reported weaker-than-expected revenue as it brought in far lower revenue from cryptocurrency bitcoin than what analysts were expecting.
  • GoPro rose 11%. The camera maker easily exceeded expectations for its most recent quarter and expressed confidence in its ability to hit its full-year targets.
  • DraftKings shares fell 6.1% after the online-betting company posted third-quarter revenue growth that fell short of analysts’ expectations and turned in a steeper net loss than had been anticipated.
  • Goodyear Tire & Rubber  and  Dominion Energy  are due to report earnings before the opening bell.
  • Yelp climbed 5.9% off hours. The online-reviews site reported record-tying quarterly revenue and earnings that blew past Street estimates.
  • American Homes 4 Rent slipped 0.9% off hours. The home-rental company reported better-than-expected results in the latest quarter as the demand for single-family home rentals remained strong.
  • Boeing added 2.4%. Current and former directors have reached an approximately $225 million agreement to settle a shareholder lawsuit that claimed the plane maker’s board failed to properly oversee safety matters related to the 737 MAX.
Chart of the Day
  • Investors have jolted government bond markets in the past month as they reassess what will happen to the basic cost of money that underpins the financial system. But other markets don’t seem to care.

Write to James Willhite at james.willhite@wsj.com

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