Tesla
Tesla beats wallstreet expectations; revenues surge by 74%
Electric car maker Tesla reported Q1 results during the week and the company beats Wallstreet expectations boosted by liquidating some bitcoins and a jump in environmental credit sales to other automakers.
Key highlights:
Higher regulatory credits, lower taxes and bitcoin sales boosted Q1 revenues
Earnings: 93 cents per share (actuals) vs. 79 cents per share (expected)
Revenue: $10.39 bn (actuals) vs. 10.29 bn expected, higher by 74% y-o-y
Exhibit 1: Quarterly net income of $438m for Q1 2021
Source: Company statements April 2021
Record deliveries despite supply chain disruptions
The company reported record sales of 184,800 Model 3 and Model Y vehicle deliveries for the first quarter beating expectations despite global chip shortage slamming other auto rivals. Post the earnings, CEO Musk informed the company’s Model S sedans will likely be delivered to customers starting next month and the Model X deliveries to begin from the third quarter this year although the company stated that the global supply chain disruptions to remain a challenge in the coming quarters for Tesla.
Environmental credits higher by 46% from previous year
The company posted profits for seven quarters in a row, largely driven by environmental credits. Tesla earns credits for exceeding emissions and fuel economy standards and usually sells them to other automakers that fall short and the company earned $518 mn from sales of such credits which was higher by 46% from the previous year. Tesla’s quarterly performance also hits the target qualifying Musk for two option payouts worth a combined $11bn. However, the net profit was lower by $299 mn and the shares of the company were down about 2% post results.
Source: Refinitive Datastream, April 27 2021
Tesla expressed Bitcoin as a long-term value for the company
Tesla, which had invested $1.5bn in bitcoin, trimmed its positions during the quarter by 10% and the proceeds from the sale of digital assets amounted to $272mn and the company expressed to hold the digital asset as a long-term value and continue to accumulate bitcoins from the customer transactions as they purchase vehicles.
Apple
Tech giant Apple’s significantly strong earnings beats market estimates
Key highlights:
The outbreak of COVID-19 and the growing trend of Work from Home saw a surge in demand of iPads, Macs and iPhones to increase the total Sales of the company by 53.6% to a record $89.54bn and Net Income grew by 110% to $23.63bn while the net profit margins increased to 26% from earlier 19%.
Revenues: $89.58bn (actuals) vs. $77.36bn (estimates) up 53.7% year-on-year
Exhibit 1: Quarterly revenue growthS
Source: Company Financials, April 2021
Gross margins: 42.5% (actuals) vs. 39.8% (estimates)
EPS: $1.40 (actuals) vs $0.99 (estimates)
The company also declared a dividend of 0.22 USD.
Segment-wise revenues saws double-digit growth in every sector
Both the computer and the iPad segments saw over 70% growth during the quarter while the high-margin services business including iCloud, App store and subscriptions like Apple Music showed a 26.6% growth during the quarter.
Exhibit 2: Segment-wise revenue for the quarter, 2021
Source: Company Financials, April 2021
Region-wise growth saw the growth of business in international markets which accounted for 67% and the demand for Apple Products in the Asian Pacific Region increased by 94% and Greater China increased by 87%.
40 million increased subscriber base for the quarter
The company has over 660 million paid subscriptions across the services on the platform which is up 40 million from the previous quarter.
The company also launched a new product in the form of AirTag, a tracking device, which is available on the company’s site. Analysts expect strong quarters to continue as more economies open up.
Amazon
Amazon’s sales soar higher by 44% buoyed by the pandemic
The e-commerce giant beat market expectations for Q1 earnings and revenue on the back of sustained demand. The shares of the company rose about 3.5% in after-hour trading post the results.
Key highlights:
Amazon benefited from the pandemic-fuel surge in online shopping boosting the company’s revenues and earnings.
Earnings: $15.79 per share (actuals) vs. $9.54 per share (expected)
Revenue: $108.52bn (actuals) vs. $104.47bn (expected)
Exhibit 1: Key financials growth for the quarter, 2021 (year-on-year)
Source: Company Financials, April 2021
Amazon’s Q1 is usually slower than the year-end results which are aided by year-end holiday shopping sales. However, the company posted higher revenues of $108.52 for Q1 up by 44% y-o-y as the consumers flocked to online shopping during the pandemic. The stock rose 76% in 2020.
Exhibit 2: Segment-wise revenues for the quarter, 2021
Source: Company Financials, April 2021
Amazon Web Services (AWS) adds to $13.5bn in Q1 2021
Amazon’s cloud –computing and advertising business continue to boom. Amazon Web Services (AWS) the business line which rents server capacity and software tools to other companies saw net sales of $13.5bn during the quarter which was up 32% year over year.
Advertising sales sees higher growth
Other Category which includes advertising sales saw a growth of 77% year-on-year to $6.9bn.
Q2 2021 Guidance:
The company expects momentum to continue in Q2 which would help investors to keep away their fears that business could slowdown in the post-pandemic environment. Amazon expects to post revenues between $110bn-$116bn surpassing Wallstreet’s projection of $108.6 bn and mark three consecutive quarters with more than $100bn in revenue. The company plans its annual two-day discount bonanza, in June 2021 which is likely to help increase revenues for the second quarter.
Facebook beats analysts’ estimates with a revenue rise of 48% and net income growth of 94% year-on-year
Key Highlights:
Facebook revenue grew by over 48% to $26.17bn for the quarter. The company attributes its massive revenue growth to a 30% increase in the average price per ad. The stock was up over 6% after the company’s strong earnings which beat Wallstreet analysts’ estimates.
Revenues: $26.17bn (actuals) vs. $23.67bn (expected) up 48% year-on-year
Earnings: $3.30 per share vs. $2.37 per share (Forecasted)
Net income: $9.5bn from $4.9bn (year-on-year) higher by 94%
Exhibit 1: Key financials growth for the quarter, 2021 (year-on-year)
Source: Company Financials, April 2021
Average revenue per user (ARPU): $9.27 (actuals) vs. $8.40 (forecasted)
Monthly users: 3.45bn across its apps vs. 3.30bn in the previous quarter.
The company also announced that it has more than 1 billion monthly active users who visit the company’s Marketplace service where the users buy and sell goods.
Exhibit 2: Average Revenue per user (ARPU)
Source: Company Financials, April 2021
Q2 2021 Guidance:
The company reported its revenue growth to remain stable or accelerate modestly in Q2 2021 as compared to a slower growth a year prior to the pandemic and reiterates the company’s focus on building e-commerce features as the key to deliver personalized experience to users. The company expects its 2021 capital expenditure to be between $19bn -$21bn.
Microsoft
Microsoft beats street expectations on both topline and bottom line with biggest revenue since 2018
Key highlights:
The company posted a 19% annualized revenue growth for the quarter largely driven by the gains in PC sales which was a result of the pandemic driven shortage in 2020. It is the company’s biggest quarterly increase since 2018. The stock is up 18% year-to-date.
Earnings: $1.95 per share (actuals) vs. $1.76 per share (expected) higher by 10.8%
Revenue: $41.71bn (actuals) vs. $41.03bn (expected)
Intelligent cloud segment grew 23% year-on-year with Azure growing by 50% for the quarter
The company’s cloud business Azure grew by 50% higher than the 46% expected by analysts.
The intelligent cloud segment which contains Azure, Windows Server, SQL Server, Visual Studio, GitHub and Enterprise Services delivered $15.12bn in revenue for the quarter- up 23% year-over-year.
The productivity and Business Process segment which contains Office, Dynamics and LinkedIn delivered $13.55bn in revenue for the quarter- up 15% year-on-year.
Personal computing unit added $13.04bn in revenue higher than the analyst estimates of $12.55bn up 19% year-on-year. However, the overall operating margin was slightly lower at 40.9% year-on-year from the previous 41.6%.
Exhibit 1: Products and services growth for 2021
Product/Service | 2021 | ||
Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | |
Azure | 48% | 50% | 50% |
Dynamics products and cloud services | 19% | 21% | 26% |
Office 365 commercial | 21% | 21% | 22% |
Office commercial pdts/cloud services | 9% | 11% | 14% |
Office consumer pdts/cloud services | 13% | 7% | 5% |
Search ads (ex traffic acquisition costs) | -10% | 2% | 17% |
Server products and cloud services | 22% | 26% | 26% |
Windows commercial pdts/cloud services | 13% | 10% | 10% |
Windows OEM | -5% | 1% | 10% |
Xbox content and services | 30% | 40% | 34% |
Data as on April 2021, Source: Company Reports
Chat and calling apps reached 145mn daily active users
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella also expressed that the Teams chat and calling app reached 145mn daily active users which was around 115mn users last year.
Added to this is the LinkedIn’s advertising business which added $3bn in revenue for the last 12mnths. Additionally, the CEO also mentioned that there are over 1.3bn monthly active devices running the Windows 10 operating system.
Q4 Guidance:
The company expects revenues for the next quarter to grow at $43.6bn-$44.5bn which is higher than the $42.98bn analysts estimates for the quarter.
Alphabet (GOOGL)
Alphabets’ earnings and revenue beat street expectations with advertising revenue contributing significantly during the quarter
Key Highlights:
The Company’s revenue rose 34% year-on-year to $55.31bn of which advertising revenue came in at $44.68bn which was 32.3% higher during the quarter making it the fastest annualized growth rate in the last four years.
YouTube ads were at $6.01bn – higher by 49% year-on-year where the platform grew to 81% users in 2021 from 73% of U.S. adults in 2019.
Additionally, the board approved an additional stock repurchase of up to $50bn.
Earnings: $26.29 per share (actuals) vs. $15.82 per share (expected)
Revenue: $55.31bn (actuals) vs. $51.70bn (expected)
Advertising revenue: of $44.68bn (over 80% of the total revenues)
Cloud revenue: $4.05bn in line with expectations (higher by 46% year-on-year)
YouTube ads: $6.01bn (actuals) vs. $5.70bn (expected) up by 49% year-on-year.
The company’s “Other Bets” revenue segment which includes health tech unit Verily and autonomous-vehicle bet Waymo, lost $1.15bn in revenues.
Exhibit 1:Segment-wise revenue growth
Data as on April 2021, Company Financials