Twitter Inc heads toward its quarterly earnings report today with a stock that has risen more than 40 percent since April when much of Wall Street was ready to write off the tech company.
The company’s share price popped after its most recent earnings report in April, when Twitter disclosed better-than-expected user growth.
The number of people on Twitter will be in sharp focus today, when investors and analysts will see if it has kept up the 6 percent year-over-year growth in monthly active users it reported in April. Twitter said then that it had 328 million users.
“For a company that people thought six months ago was knocking on death’s door and going the way of Myspace and AOL, the double-digit rebound and the continued acceleration in users has really surprised investors,” BTIG Research analyst Richard Greenfield said.
Twitter shares closed on Tuesday at US$19.97, nearly flat on the day, but up 41.4 percent since its stock hit an intraday low of US$14.12 on April 17.
The S&P 500 information technology index is up 10.6 percent since its April 17 closing price.
The surge of interest is a morale boost for Twitter, which has limped through past earnings announcements, struggled to keep a stable management and suffered unfavorable comparisons to its bigger and more profitable competitor Facebook Inc.
Twitter this month had a of 12-day streak of its shares closing up.
The business is expected to report quarterly revenue of US$536.6 million, a Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S Estimates forecast average said.
That would be a drop of 10.9 percent from US$602 million a year earlier.
What has investors upbeat is the number of people on the service, which public figures including US President Donald Trump use to blast out 140-character messages.
“People are willing to give them the benefit of the doubt if they start to grow again,” Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter said.
Other positive signs cited by analysts include cofounder and chief executive officer Jack Dorsey purchasing additional shares and cofounder Biz Stone announcing in May his return to Twitter. Ex-banker Ned Segal starts next month as Twitter’s next chief financial officer.
Meanwhile, advertisers and investors have gotten used to Twitter existing as a niche platform, Pivotal Research analyst Brian Wieser said.
“There’s nothing wrong with that,” he said.
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