Expedia's Costs Rise, Shares Fall

Expedia Inc. (EXPE) reported first-quarter earnings that were 27 cents short of the Zacks Consensus Estimate despite strong revenue that came in 5.3% higher. As a result, shares lost 5.3% in after-hours trading, more than offsetting the 1.2% gained during the day.

Revenue

Revenue for the quarter was $1.01 billion, up 3.8% sequentially and 24.0% year over year. Management stated that the Hotwire brand was impacted by the domestic car business (fleet constraints and attempts to drive up pricing), a challenging opaque business that is the natural result of a stronger economy and a similar opaque product launched by a close competitor.

Revenue by Segment

Leisure customers remained the significantly larger contributors in the last quarter, generating around 91% of revenue. Corporate customers (Egencia) accounted for the balance. The two segments grew 3.8% and 4.7%, respectively from the previous quarter and were up 20.9% and 67.9%, respectively from the year-ago quarter.

With TripAdvisor gone, Expedia is almost totally dependent on the Leisure segment (although it is beefing up the Egencia segment with acquisitions). Expedia continued to benefit from the acquisitions of VIA Travel that closed in the second quarter of 2012 and trivago, which closed in the beginning of March 2013. VIA’s operations are mostly in Northern Europe, which has done much better than the South in recent times.

Revenue by Channel

Around 72% of total revenue was generated through the merchant business (direct sales), another 23% came through the agency model (where Expedia operates as an agent of the supplier) and roughly 3% came from Advertising and Media. The three channels were up 0.4%, 10.4% and 39.4%, respectively from the Dec quarter of 2012. Growth from the year-ago quarter was 21.6%, 28.6% and 48.4%, respectively.

Revenue by Geography

Around 55% of Expedia’s quarterly revenue was generated domestically, with the remaining 45% coming from international sources. The domestic business grew 9.2% sequentially and 13.6% from a year ago. The international business fell 2.2% sequentially while increasing 39.7% from last year.

Revenue by Product Line

Hotel and Air, the two main product lines grew 24% and 14% respectively from the year-ago quarter. The increase in Hotel revenue came from a 28% increase in room nights supported by a flat average daily rate (“ADR”). Revenue per night dropped 3%. In the last quarter, international room night growth of 43% was nearly three times the domestic room night growth of 15%.

Mix was clearly negative, as the growth in Asia (much lower ADRs and revenue per room night) remains much stronger than other regions and this will likely remain a negative impact on hotel margins, while driving up volumes. ADR are also lower in Europe than in the U.S. Expedia believes that the added scale of the lower-margin business would more than make up for the negative mix impact going forward.