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First published on Simply Wall St News
Looking back on 2020 and 2021, Airbnb, Inc. (NASDAQ:ABNB) managed to hold relatively steady in a time when half of the world was under some form of lockdown. The company came out of the pandemic by improving not only their top line, but expanding and refining services. Sometimes pressure does create steel.
Today, we will review the fundamentals, and examine if the company can create enough value to justify the current valuation.
Check out our latest analysis for Airbnb
Fundamentals
Looking briefly at the price action, we see that the stock rebounded some 23% since March 7th, indicating a short term uptrend. While it is quite early, investors are already pricing-in the impact of this vacation season, where a strong resurgence of global and local tourism activity can be expected.
ABNB is expected to resume the growth trajectory from 2019 and continue revenue growth well into 2025. The company booked some losses during the past 2 years, but actually turned positive cash flows. The losses may be carried over as expenses which will provide some cost efficiencies, while the positive cash flows give investors an indication of how profitable they can expect the company to become in the future, and the cash capacity for reinvestment (CapEx) into improving the service.
Currently, AirBnb has an operating cash flow margin of 36.5% which we can sometimes associate with an EBITDA margin after income stabilizes. The operating cash flows are close to the free cash flows, but this difference might increase in the future as the company starts investing in CapEx. In any case, this gives us an indication as to where we can expect future margins to converge. Additionally, AirBnb's competitor, Booking Holdings (NASDAQ:BKNG) has a pre-pandemic FCF margin of 30%, and currently at 23%. Given the quality of AirBnb and the aggressive taking of market share from competitors, it might be reasonable to assume that the company can surpass Booking Holdings in profitability margins and deliver even more cash flows to investors. This is perhaps part of the reason why AirBnb is trading some US$15b higher than Booking.
Future Estimates
In the chart below, we can see how analysts view the company's future and use their estimates to build our own expectation for AirBnb.
Taking into account the latest results (released Feb. 15th), the consensus forecast from Airbnb's 37 analysts is for revenues of US$7.90b in 2022, which would reflect a major 32% improvement in sales compared to the last 12 months. Earnings are expected to improve, with Airbnb forecast to report a statutory profit of US$1.31 per share and formally breaking-even again.