Christopher Bloomstran Profile picture
Oct 29, 2022 19 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Twitter departed the world of public companies just shy of its 9th birthday. To the question of who won and who lost, the answer should be obvious. From a start of $45 on 11/7/13 to Elon's buy this week at $54.20, the shareholder made 20.4%. That's cumulative. 2.1% per year. 1/
Over the same stretch, the S&P 500 earned 157.4%, 11.1% per year. While revenues at Twitter grew from $665 million at year-end 2013 (post-IPO) to an annual run rate of $5.2 billion at 6/30, an impressive 26% per year, expenses exceeded revenues in 7 out of 9 years. Losses. 2/ Image
Cumulatively Twitter lost $771m but did produce positive $6.5B in cumulative cash from operations. Impressive, until considering a mind-boggling $5.2B in "non-cash" share-based comp as most of that, the always pesky SBC that CEOs/CFOs insist investors ignore. Adjusted EBITDA. 3/
After the 2013 IPO, Twitter had 570 million shares outstanding which ballooned to 771 million at 6/30. The acquisition immediately vested additional insider option and RSU shares, which brought the total share count acquired by Elon and a few close pals to 812 million shares. 4/
For those keeping track at home, that's an increase in the share count of 42%, dilution to the original non-insider shareholders of 30%, or a painfully expensive 2.9% per year. Management even decided it was a good idea to launch repurchases in 4Q 2020, despite a profit void. 5/
Spending $245 million that quarter, another $931 million in '01 and a whopping $2.2 billion in Q1 2022 alone (sales were $1.2B), repos totaled $3.3 billion over 18 months that saw Twitter produce no profit. What did the company have to show for the repos? Huge share reduction? 6/
Nope. The share count shrank from 780 million shares to all of 771 million outstanding, a miniscule 1.1% reduction. For that, Twitter spent 7.4% of its final $44 billion market cap at acquisition. It would be hard to believe except the financial statements generally don't lie. 7/
It seems the Twitter brass perfected not the production of cash for the owners but the production of shares for themselves. Excluding insider ownership at the time of the IPO, the 242m increase in shares outstanding were not created via secondary offerings. SBC gone wild. 8/
Those 242m shares, again, 30% of the company over 9 years, were those given to insiders for which they paid the company $1.7 billion upon exercise but which were worth $13.1 billion. Not a bad gig if you can get it. At least the shareholder made something, if only 2.1% a year. 9/
My bet would be the new birdkeeper, the one who shelled out nearly $26 billion of his own money (including 9.6% already owned), joined by friends like Larry Ellison and Qatr with another $5.2B cash and $13 billion in new debt from the banksters, is already planning the IPO. 10/
But what did he get? We'll soon see the wisdom of paying $44B for a business doing $5.2B in sales (that's 8.5 times) and losing money. Twitter came out of the IPO with $2.2B in cash and $200m in debt or $2B in net debt. At June 30, $6.7B in debt exceeded cash by $600 million. 11/
Recall the share repurchases. If you are losing money, you need cash from somewhere to buy the stock back. Why not leverage? Yes, why not? Now, post acquisition, in private equity fashion, Elon layered $13 billion in new debt on the net $700 million already in existence. 12/
Said differently, Elon's new money-burning company now has nearly $20B in debt and $6 billion in cash on $5 billion in revenues which were already being slowed by the recession in ad spending. "Interest burden" will become part of the lexicon in the hallowed halls of Twitter. 13/
The debt financing the deal is not like PE debt, where the PE crowd often brings its own high-yield debt to the party. This debt is hypothecated by Twitter, not guaranteed by Elon, and the bankers will surely demand not only their interest but their money back at a point. 14/
Read this as a short leash. From a start, the new Twitter begins private life with net debt at 2.7 times REVENUES, not 2.7 times EBITDA, which to some, at the multiple to EBITDA, is on the high side. EBITDA at the moment happens to be $331 million for the past 12 months. 15/
EBITDA at Twitter hit a high mark at nearly $1.1 billion in 2021, making net debt a not-low 12.5x, which even private equity folks might find a tad high. To bring the company back public, at the moment there seems little room for further debt, or the cash flow to shrink it. 16/
This is now Elon's burden. Perhaps the car company, er, software company, will be so cash-generative to buy Twitter. Probably not. In the meantime, kudos to the former Twitter brass. Happy swimming in your money mountain! To the former Twitter shareholders: Better luck next time.
*$2B in net CASH. Need an edit button, Elon.
This is now Elon's burden. Perhaps the car company, er, software company, will buy Twitter. Probably not. To the Twitter brass, departing and departed: Enjoy swimming in your mountain of hard-earned money. To the non-insider and former Twitter shareholder: Better luck next time.

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More from @ChrisBloomstran

Dec 11, 2023
A $5.8 billion offer is at hand to take Macy's private at ~$21 a share, a 32% premium over Friday's $17.39 close. Bidders call the stock “undervalued,”down from $74 in 2015. The retail graveyard is full of turnarounds. Good luck. How bad is this one? Some stunning statistics: 1/
At the proposed buyout price the $5.8 billion offer values Macy’s at roughly 7x FY 24 profit. The retailer earns an apparent 20% return on $4.1 billion in equity (much less on capital given $5.8 billion in net debt). But how profitable is M really and where have profits gone? 2/
Over the last 25 years Macy’s reported $21 billion in profits. A quarter of those were distributed as dividends. Fully the remaining 75% of profit was spent repurchasing shares. At the $21 buyout offer the stock is no higher than 25 years ago!That’s $15 billion in bad buys. 3/ Image
Read 10 tweets
Aug 5, 2023
Berkshire reported 2Q results this morning. As always, there's more under the hood than the reported results. A few thoughts on what is a very mixed bag. BRK is a good proxy for the US economy. The industrial economy is weak, consistent with what other companies are reporting. 1/
For starters, operating income was $10.0 billion for the quarter, up 6.7% over 2Q 22 and up 9.2% for six months. However, properly excluding forex gains on non-US denominated debt, profit rose from $8.3 billion to $9.6 billion in the quarter, up 15.2% and 17.9% for six months. 2/
However, much of the increase came from income on Allegheny's acquired assets in October and from BRK's now 80% investment in Pilot, up from 38.6% (5 months consolidated and 1 month equity method). Higher interest income on a larger cash balance further drove much of the gain. 3/
Read 23 tweets
Apr 22, 2023
Ark Invest, the bucket shop EFT promotional “investor,” the one whose founder CEO told a CNBC audience a year ago that ARKK would earn 50% a year (correct if she said minus), is back with its 3rd annual Tesla “research report” with a fresh $2,000 price forecast by 2027. Amen. 1/
That’s a $7 trillion market cap, or a mere 21% of the S&P 500's current cap. MSFT, AAPL, GOOGL, AMZN and META have a combined $7.7 trillion market cap today, up from $6.2 trillion at yearend. From today’s $165 share price, $2,000 in 4.75 years is 69% per year. Makes sense. 2/
Zero mention of expected hyperinflation in the report. Cue the class action lawyers. Cue @SECEnfDirector. The bull case is $2,500 per share, 25% higher than the base case and a market cap of nearly $9 trillion, or 26% of the current S&P and up from 1.5% of the index now. 3/
Read 25 tweets
Jan 21, 2023
35 FACTS NOT LIKELY FOUND ON ARKK YET UNRELEASED 12/31/2022 FACTSHEET

1. Loss from 2/12/2021 Peak: -80.1%
2. CNBC Appearances Since 2/12/2021 Peak: 23
3. Cumulative NET Assets Raised Since 10/31/2014 Launch: $17.1 Billion ($14.5B in 2020 and 2021)
4. Assets at 12/31/2022: $6.0B
5. Cumulative Management Fees Earned: $300 Million
6. Market Value at 2/12/2021 Peak: $29 Billion
7. Dollar Loss Since Peak: $23 Billion
8. Annual Return vs S&P 500 Since 10/31/2014 Launch: 5.4% vs 10.3%
9. $ARKK Price 12/31/22: $31.24
10. Date Last $31.24: 08/22/2017
11. AUM at 8/22/17: $450 million ($15m @ 1/1/17)
12. Net Inflows Since 8/22/17: $16.9B (Out of $17.1 Since Inception)
13. Percent of ALL DOLLARS Invested in ARKK Since 10/31/2014 Inception Losing Money: 98%
13a. Yep
Read 8 tweets
Dec 25, 2022
Who could forget the C-Suite high jinks when Elon and CFO Zach Kirkhorn invested $1.5 billion in Bitcoin and added the titles "Technoking of Tesla" and "Master of Coin?" Since the March 15, 2021 rebranding, Tesla and Bitcoin are down 48% and 70%, respectively. Great fun.🎄 1/
While the Bitcoin position and the Tesla outside shareholders have suffered mightily, how have the INSIDERS fared? If you guessed considerably better you are correct. Collectively the brass at Tesla appear to have unloaded 126 million Tesla shares for more than $41 billion. 2/
While Elon's sales are the preponderance of that, selling at an average share price of $325 is pretty good when measured against the present $123.15 price. That's a current bid 62% below the average sale. Nearly all shares were gifts from the board, not bought out of pocket. 3/
Read 15 tweets
Dec 17, 2022
Unlocking this valuation genius. When offering to buy Twitter on April 14 for $54.20, $44 billion, the 3-mo T-bill yielded 0.77%. Today, at 4.20% (what are the odds), it’s reported Twitter is seeking a new equity “funding round” at the same $44 billion valuation. Fascinating. 1/
Given the purchase closed on October 27, solidly in Q4, curious as well if Twitter will open the interim books to prospective “investors.” As a public company, Twitter naturally wouldn’t publish financials until 12/31. It’s reported the money needs to be raised before yearend. 2/
I’m quite certain prospective investors will want to see the state of revenues. Conventional wisdom here on Twitter believes a massive cut in labor means huge margin expansion. Important when on $5B in revenues and $13B in debt, $1.2B in interest expense exceeds $1B in EBITDA. 3/
Read 4 tweets

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