Peloton Stock Is Likely to Fade as Quickly as a New Year’s Resolution

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When investors abandoned Peloton (NASDAQ:PTON) stock in droves after the company posted quarterly results on Nov. 4, people should have expected it.

Peloton (PTON stock) sign on city storefront
Peloton (PTON stock) sign on city storefront

Source: JHVEPhoto / Shutterstock.com

Since July, when PTON stock peaked, bulls failed to take the share price above the 50 and 200 day moving averages. The leisure stationary exercise bike maker suffers from a troubling negative trend.

In an almost post-Covid world where international travel resumes, consumers are questioning the need for an expensive bike that costs thousands of dollars.

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Getting virtual classes at home has a subscription fee. As people tire of the same routine, Peloton faces increasing headwinds.

Disastrous Results Hurt PTON Stock

In the first fiscal quarter, Peloton posted revenue growing by only 6.2% from last year to $805.2 million.

It lost $1.25 a share (on a GAAP measure). The business momentum slowed despite connected fitness subscriptions growing by 87% to $2.49 million. It ended the quarter with more than 6.2 million subscribers.

The firm posted a few strong key metrics. For example, net monthly connected fitness churn was only 0.82%. It retained 92% in the last 12 months.

Furthermore, its connected fitness subscription workouts grew by 55% to 120.5 million. Unfortunately, workouts per connected fitness subscriptions fell from 20.7 last year to 16.6 in Q1.

The lower customer engagement forced Peloton to impose a hiring freeze and lower its forecast. In the second quarter, the company expects revenue in the range of $1.1 billion to $1.2 billion.

It will lose money again, as it expects a negative $325 million to negative $350 million adjusted EBITDA.

For FY 2022, Peloton expects a negative $425 million to a negative $475 million adjusted EBITDA.

Cash Burn a Non-Issue

On Nov. 16, Peloton announced a stock sale. It will underwrite 23.913 million Class A common stock for $46 a share. PTON stock briefly rallied after the capital raise but ended lower a day later. It trades just shy of $43 today.

The company has a strong, recognizable brand name. Speculators are betting that the fad is not fading yet.

The company’s cost control constraints will slow the quarterly cash burn. Loaded with over $1 billion in equity, the bike firm has plenty of capital to pivot the business, invest in growth, and re-ignite its business momentum.

Momentum investors who bet on the rising fad for returns should walk away. The business optimism shifted from neutral, after the pandemic.