Tucows reported nice increases in revenue and income. There are changes afoot in its business, though.
Tucows (NASDAQ:TCX) reported first quarter earnings after the market closed Wednesday. The headline numbers are:
- Net revenue up 38% YoY to $95.8 million
- Net income up 53% YoY to 3.7 million
- Adjusted EBITDA up 64% YoY to $10.4 million
Domain segment revenue increased from $50.3 million in Q1 2017 to $72.2 million in Q1 2018.
But…these numbers are a bit tricky to compare. Tucows acquired Enom on January 20, 2017, so the numbers get a bit of a lift YoY. A bigger impact was the bulk transfer of Namecheap names in January this year. Domain registrars recognize revenue over the life of a domain name registration. Transfering these names to Namecheap accelerated revenue recognition to the tune of $14.6 million.
On the cost side, it accelerated its recognization of $14.5 million in prepaid registry expenses.
This shows just how low the margin was on Enom’s Namecheap deal. However, the company benefited by monetizing Namecheap’s expired domain names.
Tucows CEO Elliot Noss also provided some commentary suggesting headwinds in the mobile access business Ting. When Ting came on the scene, the mobile phone business was a complete mess. Everyone hated their mobile provider, and this played in Ting’s favor. If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, Ting is probably flattered right now. Both secondary brands and major ones have imitated some of Ting’s approach, and fewer people are looking to switch mobile providers now. It will be interesting to see how this plays out for Ting in the coming years.
I’m always a bit amused by stock analysts’ questions. I realize that they are covering lots of companies. I also realize they can ask the company questions while not on the investor conference call. But I’m amused at how pointless some questions are while they miss more important questions when it comes to updating their models. (I’m not channeling Elon Musk. He actually dismissed important questions.)
For example, a big question analysts should be asking is what impact the price increases at Enom and OpenSRS will have on both attrition and gross margins going forward. These seem like fairly drastic price increases for some customers and need to be baked into models. Maybe the net increases aren’t that big if most domains are at resellers with high volumes. The models should also assume some attrition due to the price increases.
Another interesting question is what impact GDPR changes have on revenue. This is a question people should be asking other public registrars. Specifically, if the registrar keeps personal information out of Whois for free, what happens to Whois privacy revenue? How much money are registrars making from Whois privacy?
Nikola says
There are single letter domains in other languages;
Of course, latin is the king for the moment but even in laten there is latin extended alphabet and some single letters there are pretty good;
I have ô.com
ô is a single letter (and a word) in French, Portuguese and Vietnameze
Bill Sweetman says
In my experience working at several publicly-traded companies, I came to the sad realization that stock analysts rarely understand the companies they are supposed to be analyzing beyond a superficial level (if that). This is one of the reasons I am deeply cynical about the stock market; it’s a lot of blind leading the blind.