Expectations for GoPro Inc. (NSDQ:GPRO) were low coming into the company’s earnings call, yet the company somehow still managed to disappoint. GoPro reported mixed Q1 2016 results that beat top line expectations but missed on the bottom line. The company reported revenue of $183.54M, a massive 49.5% Y/Y decline while non-GAAP EPS of -$0.63 was $0.03 lower than the consensus on Wall Street and compared poorly with EPS of $0.24 that the company posted a year ago.
Meanwhile, GoPro’s gross margin tumbled 1,260 basis points to 32.5% compared to a year ago thanks mainly to deep Hero4 Session price markdowns. The market is currently flooded with cheap cameras from the likes of Xiaomi and Sony which has forced GoPro to cut prices on its Hero product series and consequently taken a big hit on the bottom line. Meanwhile, operating expenses climbed 37% despite continued headcount reductions. GoPro’s headcount fell 3.6% Q/Q but climbed 37.8% Y/Y to 1,483.
Camera shipments fell 48% Y/Y to 701k though GoPro said that consumer sell-through was close to year-ago levels and 50% above sell-in as retailers continued to work through older inventory.
GoPro Inc. no longer provides quarterly revenue guidance. The company’s management, however, reiterated its earlier guidance for full-year 2016 revenue to clock in the range of $1.35B-$1.5B (7%-17% Y/Y decline).
GoPro shares have been hammered after the earnings call, tanking 20% in what is again shaping up to be another pretty brutal year for GoPro investors. The shares are now down 45.7% YTD and 80.5% over the past 12 months.
GoPro 12-Month Share Returns
Source: GoPro stock price chart by amigobulls.com
GoPro Expanding into Mobile Space, Karma Delayed till Holiday Season
There were a few bright spots though in GoPro’s latest report. The first is that the company is moving into the mobile space and plans to integrate its latest mobile video editing apps, Splice and Replay (now named Quik) into a single platform. CEO Nicholas Woodman said:
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