Investors hated Groupon's Q4 2012 earnings— both revenue and non-GAAP earnings came in lighter than expected. That places renewed pressure on CEO Andrew Mason, whose job was called into question back in December.
I argued back then that his job was likely safer than the peanut gallery thinks it is.
After this new set of numbers, I think he's actually less likely to lose his job than he was before. These charts show why.
First, look at Groupon's underlying economic fundamentals.
For a long time the company was derided as an unprofitable Ponzi scheme. But Q4's numbers show that, for the first time, Groupon's revenues are rising steadily. At the same time, Mason has gotten to grips with his operating costs. Operating costs — sales and marketing, mostly — are well south of revenues. It looks like Mason has finally uncoupled his spend-money-to-make-money problem, and the business model at Groupon does actually work:
The reason Groupon didn't make a profit on the bottom line this quarter is because the company has incurred a new set of costs to do with servicing its new Groupon Goods business — in which the company buys inventory and sells it directly to customers. As Bloomberg pointed out, those costs should be temporary as Groupon puts in place the necessary infrastructure to service a new business that already generates $225 million per quarter in sales.
Groupon's traditional business — daily deals — still has healthy numbers underpinning it. The company has more active customers than ever before:
OK, so the average size of a customer deal is going down, but that's to be expected when you're servicing 41 million members. (For a parallel, there's a reason McDonald's serves 99 cent burgers and not $21 Michelin-starred meals.)
Mason can't control the stock price, but he can control whether the company can grow and be profitable. The fact that he's gotten revenues to go up while underlying day-to-day costs are going down suggests that Groupon is actually headed in the right direction.
Groupon is still a game of financial whack-a-mole, however.
It wouldn't be Groupon if Mason didn't have big headaches, right?
The worst part of the business right now is Groupon's international operations. Those companies have lost $58 million in revenue since their peak in Q2 2012. It's a shrinking business propped up by robust U.S. growth:
The problem here is that Groupon only has international operations because it went on a huge acquisition spree over the last couple of years. Groupon COO Kal Raman indicated there would be layoffs in the division, because it's inefficient compared to the U.S.
The stock doesn't reflect Groupon's fundamentals.
If the board of directors' main priority is the stock price, then Mason remains in jeopardy. If, on the other hand, its main priority is the underlying profitability of the company, then Mason should be safe. Of course, stocks don't go up unless the underlying business is sound. So, as long as Mason can wrestle some value out of Groupon's foreign operations and, eventually, cut costs on the Groupon Goods business, expect to see him around for a while longer.
SEE ALSO: There Are 2 Obvious Reasons Groupon CEO Andrew Mason Wasn't Fired
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