Tag Archives: Revenue

NYC Hotel Industry in a ‘Depression,’ Room Revenue Down 60%, Report Says – NBC New York

The hotel industry is in a recession or worse in 21 of the top 25 U.S. markets, and New York City is one of the worst off of all, according to a new report released Thursday by a lodging trade group.

The American Hotel & Lodging Association said the city has lost about a third of its hotel rooms since the pandemic. For those that are left, revenue per available room was $95 in May — down 62 percent from May 2019.

That’s a deep enough drop to put the city’s hotel industry in the “depression” category, the association said.

In percentage terms, only San Francisco, Boston and Washington are suffering more. (In dollar terms, NYC’s revenue drop is worse, though.)

Just four top markets nationwide have stabilized or returned to growth versus two years ago, the association said — Phoenix, Virginia Beach, Tampa and Miami.

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Google undercuts Apple with new 15% revenue share for Play apps

Enlarge / The logo for Google’s app and content marketplace, Google Play.

Today, Google announced a major change to the revenue-sharing structure of Google Play apps—one that could significantly alter the fortunes of independent developers or small companies who rely on the Android platform’s app store for revenue.

Starting on July 1, Google will take a 15 percent cut of the first $1 million in annual Google Play revenue from Google Play that a developer earns. That’s down from 30 percent previously. The 30 percent figure will still apply to all revenue over $1 million each year.

Google claims that 99 percent of developers with apps and content on Google Play will experience reductions in fees paid to Google of up to 50 percent.

On the surface, this looks like a very similar deal to what Apple announced late last year when it declared that developers making under $1 million will soon begin paying just 15 percent to the platform rather than the historical 30 percent. But it’s actually different in a way that could be consequential for many developers; it’s arguably a little more generous.

That’s because Apple applies its lower 15 percent rate to a developer until that developer exceeds $1 million in revenue in a given year, at which point the higher 30 percent number is applied to all of that developer’s earnings. Google still charges 15 percent on that first million even if the developer makes $5 million. So in Google’s model, a developer who earns $1.2 million on an app pays 15 percent on $1 million, then 30 percent on $200,000. In Apple’s, a developer making $800,000 forks over 15 percent on that amount, but if they make $1.2 million, they pay 30 percent on all $1.2 million, not just $200,000.

To that end, the author of Google’s developer blog post (Product Management VP Sameer Samat) claims that developers who are pulling in $2 million, $5 million, and “even $10 million” each year have said to Google that this change will make a difference in making their businesses more sustainable, even though they make significantly more than $1 million. After all, an extra 15 percent of $1 million is $150,000, which is not a small amount of money to any but the largest and most successful companies.

This change is likely not born entirely of altruism, however. First of all, Google is almost directly matching—slightly beating, actually—Apple’s offer to developers as the App Store and Google Play compete directly. Also, both Apple and Google have been subject to antitrust lawsuits and investigations over their grips on their respective app marketplaces. Like Apple with the App Store, Google requires app developers to use its own payment system for apps on Play, making it difficult to circumvent these fees.

While the fees themselves are usually not the primary subject of the investigations and suits, this change improves optics and sentiment for the two tech giants while they are beleaguered, and it does so without costing them much money. The significant majority of the revenue Apple and Google receive from their app marketplaces comes from apps with revenues far beyond $1 million annually.

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Nokia Sees Revenue Drop in 2021 in Fight for Market Share

TipRanks

2 Stocks Flashing Signs of Strong Insider Buying

Tracking insiders’ stock purchases can make a viable investment strategy. Corporate insiders – the company officers and board members – are naturally positioned to be in the know, to know how company policies and performance will impact stock prices. They can use that knowledge to inform their own stock purchases – but not unfairly. By law, they must disclose publicly their own stock holdings, and the general public can learn from those purchases and sales. Insider moves can informative or uninformative. The latter are simple shifts in portfolio holdings, usually not of great magnitude, done to tweak an ownership percentage or adhere to a tax regulation. The informative moves, however, are different. These are the big-number buys and sells – and when an insider, or several insiders, start making informative share moves, market watchers should take note. These are signs that something big may be in store. TipRanks follows the insiders’ trades, making use of the publicly published stock moves to track them. The Insiders’ Hot Stocks page provides the scoop on which stocks the market’s insiders are buying so that you can make informed purchases. We’ve picked two stocks with recent informative buys to show how the data works for you. Brown & Brown (BRO) Brown & Brown is an insurance company – one that does over $2.3 billion in annual business. The company is based in Florida, boasts a market cap of $12.4 billion, has 300 office locations, and is the fifth largest insurance broker in the US. Brown & Brown deals in risk management, offering insurance products for customers of all sizes: government agencies, professional organization, businesses, corporations, and families and individuals. Brown & Brown has seen its revenues and earnings rise year-over-year during the corona crisis – which makes sense, as a stable and reliable insurance company should expect to see an increase in business during unsettled times. The 4Q20 results showed revenue of $642.1 million, up 10.9% yoy. Earnings came in at 34 cents per share, an increase of 25% yoy. On the insider front, Board of Directors member James Hay put down $433,750 for a purchase of 10,000 shares on January 29. This brings the insider sentiment here into positive territory. Truist analyst Mark Hughes, rated 5-stars by TipRanks, sees Brown & Brown as a solid choice for investors interesting in the insurance sector. “The company is generating solid organic revenue growth, margins should be steady-to-up this year, and M&A activity has been healthy, all of which should drive solid top- and bottom-line expansion in coming periods. We believe BRO shares remain a good way for investors to get exposure to the recovering economy and firming P&C pricing,” Hughes opined. In line with his optimistic approach, Hughes rates BRO a Buy, and his $55 price target indicates confidence in ~25% growth for the next 12 months. (To watch Hughes’ track record, click here) Is the rest of the Street in agreement? As it turns out, the analyst consensus is more of a mixed bag. Split almost right down in the middle, 4 Buy ratings and 5 Holds were assigned in the last three months, giving BRO Moderate Buy status. With a $51.44 average price target, the potential twelve-month gain comes in at 17%. (See BRO stock analysis on TipRanks) Crown Castle (CCI) The second insider pick we’re looking at, Crown Castle, is a real estate investment trust with a twist. The company owns and manages communications infrastructure, specifically, the tower and transmitter locations so important to cellular networks. Crown Castle’s property portfolio includes more than 40,000 towers, 70,000 small cell locations, and 80,000 miles worth of connecting fiber optic cables. The rollout of the new 5G wireless network has been a boon to Crown Castle’s model in the past year. Crown Castle’s revenues remained steady through 2020, ranging between $1.4 to $1.49 billion, with the third and fourth quarter results both at $1.49 billion. For Q4, that was an 11% yoy gain. For 2020 as a whole, CCI reported $5.3 billion, up 3.8% yoy. Crown Castle’s position was sound enough that the company raised its dividend payment by more than 10% in December. The new payment, $1.33 per common share, gives an annual payment of $5.32 and a yield of 3.2%. Turning to the insider trades, we find that Kevin Stephens, one of the company’s Directors, paid $328,300 for a bloc of 2,000 shares. Stephens now owns $671,000 worth of CCI; this recent purchase nearly doubled his total holding. 5-star analyst Colby Synesael, from Cowen, takes a highly bullish stance on Crown Castle. He notes that CCI has “a new agreement with Verizon in which the carrier has agreed to lease 15K small cells from Crown that will install over the next four years…” The analyst added, “[We] estimate the avg. ARPU is $500/mo. (w/ a 1.5% escalator), suggesting an initial annualized value of ~$90MM. The deal represents the company’s largest single small cell deal in its history… the deal raises Crown’s small cell backlog to ~30K from previously ~20K.” Synesael’s confidence is clear from his Outperform (i.e. Buy) rating on the stock. His $197 price target suggests a one-year upside of 21%. (To watch Synesael’s track record, click here) Overall, Wall Street’s analysts like what they see here. CCI’s Strong Buy consensus rating is based on 8 recent reviews, breaking down to 7 Buys and a single Hold. CCI’s average price target is $177.25, implying a 9% upside from the current share price of $177.25. (See CCI stock analysis on TipRanks) To find good ideas for stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks’ Best Stocks to Buy, a newly launched tool that unites all of TipRanks’ equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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UPS addresses ‘elephant in the room,’ as Amazon accounted for more than $11 billion in 2020 revenue

United Parcel Service Inc.
UPS,
+0.58%
surged 3.7% in morning trading, enough to pace the Dow Jones Transportation Average’s
DJT,
+1.97%
gainers, after the package delivery giant reported earlier better-than-expected fourth-quarter results. In the post-earnings conference call with analysts, Chief Executive Carol Tomé said, “So let’s just address the elephant in the room, which is our largest customer.” Out of 19 million customers, Tomé said Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN,
+1.81%
was the largest, with the ecommerce giant’s share of total revenue rising to 13.3% in 2020 from 11.6% in 2019. With UPS reported total 2020 revenue of $84.63 billion, that indicates Amazon accounted for $11.26 billion in 2020 revenue, up from $8.59 billion a year ago. UPS shares have gained 1.6% over the past three months, while Amazon’s stock has advanced 13.9%, the Dow transports have tacked on 10.8% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.93%
has climbed 13.4%.

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Apple down in after hours trading despite posting big beats on revenue, EPS

Bloomberg

Reddit Day Trader Army Fattens Fortunes of the Super-Rich

(Bloomberg) — A horde of traders on Reddit that see themselves as sticking it to the establishment by hunting for heavily shorted stocks is adding billions to the wealth of some of the world’s ultra-rich.Larry Chen, chairman and chief executive officer of GSX Techedu, saw his fortune increase $4.2 billion Wednesday as U.S. depository shares of the Beijing-based online tutoring company rose 36%, pushing his net worth to $15.6 billion on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.Fellow Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin’s wealth surged by $773 million through his stake in AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. A flood of retail traders caused the stock to spike as much as 310% even as the broader market slumped. Hedge funds such as Mudrick Capital, which owned 4.6 million shares in the cinema operator as of Jan. 4, also got a boost.Chewy Inc. co-founder Ryan Cohen added about $1.8 billion with his holding in GameStop Corp., the video-game retailer that has surged more than 1,700% this year. Fellow investor Donald Foss, founder of subprime auto lender Credit Acceptance Corp., now owns a stake worth about $1.2 billion, according to the Bloomberg index.Even the head of Tootsie Roll Industries Inc. benefited, with CEO Ellen Gordon’s fortune rising $185 million as the confectioner’s shares rose to a record, while National Beverage Corp. founder Nick Caporella saw his net worth jump $1.8 billion to $6.8 billion as shares of the maker of LaCroix soda water climbed 40%.Meteoric RallyDay traders have been piling into previously unloved tickers favored by short sellers in recent sessions, driving them to record highs. The meteoric rally of GameStop has already worn down some institutional investors, with Melvin Capital closing out its short position by Wednesday.The hunt for heavily shorted stocks is being led by the Reddit forum WallStreetBets, which boasts roughly 2.8 million members. Some of the more outspoken have taken an activist stance, portraying their campaign as taking a stand against such societal problems as financial inequality and generational injustice.Gordon owns just over half of Tootsie Roll Industries’ common shares and 81% of its B shares, according to company filings. Her stake in the maker of Tootsie Pops, Junior Mints and Dubble Bubble gum, which she owns both directly and on behalf of other family members, is now worth $1.8 billion.Cohen disclosed an investment in GameStop in August. By December, he’d purchased 9 million shares in the retailer for a total cost of $76 million and now holds a stake worth about $3.1 billion. GameStop shares rose 135% to a record $347.51 in New York after triggering three volatility halts.Wang, the founder of closely held conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group, now owns a stake worth about $1 billion in AMC, which climbed to $19.90 in New York trading, the most since October 2018. Wang has a net worth of $14.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.(Updates gains starting in the second paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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Tesla Stock Sinks As Q4 Earnings Miss, Revenue Beats Views

Tesla (TSLA) missed Q4 earnings estimates late Wednesday, as the maker of electric cars embarks on a pivotal year that will see new factories and models while competitors like Nio (NIO), Xpeng (XPEV) and Li Auto (LI) represent bigger challenges. Tesla stock fell.




X



The report comes after Tesla CEO Elon Musk helped fuel surges in GameStop (GME) and Etsy (ETSY) shares with offhand online comments in recent days.

Tesla Earnings

Estimates: Analysts expect EPS of 90 cents, more than double the same period a year ago, as revenue climbs 37% to $10.13 billion, according to Zacks Investment Research.

Results: EPS of 80 cents on revenue of $10.74 billion. Revenue from regulatory credits shot up 202% to $401 million. Earlier this month, Tesla reported that deliveries surged 61% in Q4 to 180,570, led by a 74.7% pop from the Model 3.

Average selling price fell 11% as the sale mixed shifted to the cheaper Model 3 and Y vs. the Model S and X.

Stock: Shares fell 4.7% later after closing down 2.1% at 864.16 on the stock market today. Tesla stock soared more than 700% in 2020 and has long been extended from a 466 buy point from a cup with handle on Nov. 18, according to MarketSmith chart analysis.

Tesla stock flashed several signals of a climax run on Jan. 8, which occurs when a stock has been rallying for months. But while shares took a breather on Jan. 11, they’ve not only regained those losses but also hit an all-time high of 900.40 intraday on Jan. 25. Tesla is an IBD Leaderboard stock.


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2021 Production Outlook

Look for Tesla to give guidance for 2021 deliveries after hitting 499,550 in 2020, just shy of its goal of 500,000. Meanwhile, Tesla began making deliveries of China-made Model Y SUVs, which could further boost 2021 numbers.

“For Tesla we believe the initial line in the sand for delivery unit guidance is in the 750,000 range with the upside bias given the growth we are using not just in Chains but in Europe and the U.S. with EV demand accelerating globally,” said Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives in a recent note to clients. 

Ives adds that while the Chinese market is the “heart and lungs of the Tesla bull thesis,” China-based rivals Nio, Xpeng and Li Auto also stand to benefit from increased demand.

Ives, who has a price target of 950 for Tesla stock, says he believes 40% or more of its sales will come from China by 2022. China represents the main growth region for Tesla sales, followed by Europe and the U.S.

“We believe that the China growth story is worth at least $100 per share in a bull case to Tesla as this EV penetration is set to ramp significantly over the next 12 to 18 months, along with major battery innovations coming out of Giga 3,” he said.


AMC Stock Tops GameStop’s Surge Amid Reddit-Hedge Fund Game Of Chicken


Other Tesla Updates Possible

Third Bridge analyst Nick Shields says Tesla could also reveal details about revamped Model S and Model X vehicles. Tesla shut down its Fremont, Calif. factory over the Christmas holiday. Rumors swirled that it was because it was retooling its assembly line to produce updated Model S/X cars. 

“Refreshes of each model (assuming they generate a surge in orders) would be a significant near-term margin tailwind for the carmaker, as the S and X are the company’s two highest margin vehicles,” he said in a recent note.

Meanwhile, Tesla is building new factories in Germany and Austin, Texas, with plans to start production at both sites later this year. And last month, the Indian Express reported that Tesla will begin operations in India early next year.

This year will also be key for new models. Tesla is due to start production of its Cybertruck in late 2021, as General Motors (GM) and Lordstown Motors (RIDE) ready competing electric trucks. Tesla’s Semi class 8 big-rig truck is also due to begin production this year and be available in late 2021.

Follow Adelia Cellini Linecker on Twitter @IBD_Adelia.

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Xbox Hardware Revenue Grows as Microsoft Reports Record Earnings

Microsoft has posted record profits this quarter, including a boom in its gaming sector which has revenues up 51%. The company as a whole posted a record-breaking $43.1 billion in revenue.In the most recent financial earnings report for the period ending on December 31, 2020, Microsoft shared that revenue increased by 17% to reach $43.1 billion and $15 billion in profit.

As per the case for the last several quarters, profits were driven by Microsoft’s cloud platform, but that doesn’t mean there weren’t other successful ventures.

Confirmed Xbox Series X Games

Hardware saw the biggest growth thanks to the launch of the Xbox Series X|S. Microsoft says the gaming hardware segment grew 86% thanks to the new hardware, though the company hasn’t shared exact numbers.

Meanwhile, Microsoft reported that revenue has grown 51% overall in games, with Xbox content and services revenue up 40%. The growth has been attributed to third-party titles, Xbox Game Pass subscriptions, and first-party titles.

According to Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella during the conference call, Xbox Game Pass now has 18 million subscribers. The numbers also don’t take into account Microsoft’s Zenimax acquisition, which it says is expected to close later this year.

News of Microsoft’s successful quarter has pushed up Microsoft stock. The success of the company is of course based on a broad array of product and offerings, not just gaming. Microsoft’s line encompasses software, apps, home computers, and more; while the R&D department dabbles in projects like putting servers underwater.

For more, check out IGN’s review of the Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S review, and details on a new Halo Infinite info drop later this week.

Matt T.M. Kim is a reporter for IGN. You can reach him @lawoftd on Twitter.

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