Slack beat expectations in its second quarter earnings report, posting $145 million in sales after the bell on Wednesday. The company was expected to report $141.25 million in sales.
Slack’s stock, however, fell swiftly in after hours trading due to weaker-than-expected guidance for the third quarter. The earnings report was the company’s first release since going public in June under the ticker WORK on the New York Stock Exchange.
“We remain focused on expansion within existing customers and growing our large enterprise customer base,” Allen Shim, Slack’s chief financial officer, said in a statement. Shim added that the company’s revenue growth was 58 percent year-over-year increase.
The popular workplace messaging platform posted a net loss per share of $0.14, better than the expected loss of $0.18. Slack, however, said it expects a loss of $0.08 to $0.09 per share in the third quarter, slightly more than what analysts were expecting.
It also said revenue growth would slow from 58 percent to less than 48 percent, which seemed to worry investors after hours with shares falling more than 15 percent. Yet the drop comes after the stock gained more than an 8 percent during the trading day Wednesday.
Since its founding in 2014, Slack has grown to be used by over 600,000 organizations in 150 countries. The platform, which has free and paid subscription plans, is now used by an estimated 10 million people who send over 1 billion messages a week. Shim added that Slack also increased its paid customer base by 720 clients, which marked a 75 percent year-over-year jump.
Slack’s market debut earlier this summer followed several other major tech startups, such as Uber ($UBER) and Lyft ($LYFT), that went public this year.
Forgoing the traditional initial public offering process, Slack directly listed its shares on the market. The big difference between that and an IPO is that the company did not issue new shares, but instead, existing shareholders sold their stock to public investors. That means, unlike Uber and Lyft, Slack did not raise additional capital as part of the IPO.
The last major company to complete a direct listing was Spotify ($SPOT), which went public in April 2018.
“This is an entirely new category of software enabling a once-in-a-generation shift in the way people work together,” Stewart Butterfield, the company's CEO and co-founder, added in a statement. “We believe channel-based collaboration is so superior to email-based communication for work, that this shift is inevitable.”
Stocks closed lower on the last trading day of 2021, but all three major indexes ended the year with double-digit growth. The S&P 500, in particular, marked its third straight positive year. What's in store for 2022 amid the Federal Reserve's plans to speed up asset tapering and raise interest rates, and how could COVID-19 continue to impact stocks? Steve Sosnick, Chief Strategist at Interactive Brokers, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss movement on the last trading day of 2021, market predictions for 2022, and more.
As the pandemic continues to evolve, and cases of the omicron variant increase, how will this impact economic growth and movement in the new year? Consumer behavior continues to shift, labor issues linger, and questions about whether the pandemic will eventually become endemic are on economists' minds as we enter 2022. Jason Ware, Economist & Chief Investment Officer at Albion Financial Group, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss.
Mike Draper, Founder and Owner of Raygun, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell, where he discusses how increases to the minimum wage in several states next year will help his company and explains why he advocates for it nationally.
The push to regulate the gig worker economy is gaining steam as the share of workers who participate in freelancing through businesses like Uber and Lyft have also exponentially grown during the pandemic. Employment attorney Mark Kluger, founding partner at Kluger Healey, LLC, joined Cheddar to break down how the battle to reclassify gig workers will continue in the new year, and why the issue continues to generate conflict. "More and more workers are using gig work as their primary source of income and as a result of that they are not like employees in the sense that they don't have benefits like health insurance," Kluger noted.
Renewable energy company Heliogen has gone public via a SPAC merger with blank check company Athena Technology Acquisition Corp. on the NYSE. Joining Cheddar, founder and CEO Bill Gross went into why he felt the end of 2021 was the best time to get into the public markets. "If you think of the Industrial Revolution and the digital revolution, this renewable revolution is probably going to be as big or larger than that," he said. "So we're going to use this capital to scale our business, to meet more customer demand, to do more projects in parallel, and to scale our research and development to continue to drive down the price to be competitive with fossil fuels."
Carl "The Moon" Runefelt, a Bitcoin investment expert, recently made a hefty purchase of a $2 million Bugatti sports car at a Dubai dealership. The Swedish crypto evangelist joined Cheddar to talk about how he made the big acquisition of a luxury item he had long had his eye on and why he chose the dealership, The Car Vault, to make the unprecedented transaction. "They accepted crypto directly, and that was important to me," he said. "I am not going to go to any car dealership that don't accept crypto, and that's kind of a principle I have today."
Marjorie Mesidor, Partner at Phillips & Associates, joined Wake Up With Cheddar to break down the latest trends in the job market, as the demand for labor has recovered, but as the number of people willing to fill positions remains relatively low.