Spotify Q2 subscribers surge as quarterly loss widens

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Spotify (SPOT) reported a wider-than-expected loss for the second quarter even though subscribers surged.

The streaming service posted a net loss of 302 million euros, or 1.55 euros per share, wider than the year-earlier period's loss of 125 million euros, or 0.85 euros a share. Analysts had expected a loss of 0.66 euros per share.

Monthly active users (MUAs) beat estimates of 530 million to hit 551 million — a 27% improvement compared to the year-ago period. Net additions of 36 million represented Spotify's largest quarterly net addition performance in its history.

Premium subscribers also surpassed expectations of 217 million, jumping another 17% year over year to hit 220 million.

The results come one day after Spotify confirmed long-awaited price hikes, which caused the stock to close at its lowest level since mid-December on Monday as investors weighed concerns over what the increases could mean for subscriber numbers.

Spotify's stock plunged 14% on Tuesday following the results.

Here are Spotify's second quarter results compared to Wall Street's consensus estimates, as compiled by Bloomberg:

  • Revenue: 3.18 billion euros versus 3.21 billion euros expected

  • Loss per share: -1.55 euros versus -0.66 euros expected

  • Total monthly active users (MUAs): 551 million versus 530 million expected

The company guided that monthly active users will grow to 572 million in the third quarter, significantly above consensus calls for 548 million, with premium subscribers anticipated to reach 224 million.

It also guided to revenue of 3.3 billion euros, assuming an "approximately 600 basis point headwind to growth year-over-year due to foreign exchange rate movements." Price increases are expected to have a minimal impact on total revenue in Q3, the company said.

Spotify missed gross margin estimates of 25.5% to hit 24.1% in the second quarter amid greater losses from cuts in its podcast division coupled with higher music royalty costs. Spotify guided to a Q3 boost in gross margins to 26% "primarily driven to year-over-year improvement in podcasting and other costs of revenue."

In the earnings release, Spotify said gross margins and operating loss, which came in at 247 million euros in Q2 compared to a loss of 194 million euros in the year-ago period, "were both primarily impacted by charges related to our actions to streamline operations and reduce costs."

"Excluding these items, adjusted gross margin of 25.5% was in-line and up 22 bps Y/Y (consistent with how we guided the quarter)," the company added.