Why Twilio Is Ready for a Turnaround

Wall Street has been harsh on Twilio (NYSE: TWLO) this year, as concerns about key customers switching to in-house solutions have overshadowed its terrific financial growth. The cloud communications platform specialist has massively underperformed the market this year, which doesn't seem logical given its consistently rising revenue, stable margin performance (despite being in the early stages of growth), and a robust outlook.

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TWLO Chart

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In fact, Twilio had beaten expectations quite comfortably in the last-reported quarter. It also raised its annual guidance thanks to a sizable long-term enterprise licensing deal with an unnamed tech customer, which is reportedly worth close to eight figures and will run for three years. Still, investors have maintained a safe distance from this fast-growing tech stock. Will there be a change in perception in the New Year? Let's find out.

Man and woman working at a computer.
Man and woman working at a computer.

Image source: Getty Images.

Twilio's customer diversification could boost investor confidence

A turnaround at Twilio might seem like a pipe dream after Uber decided to multisource its cloud communications platform. In May 2017, Twilio revealed that the ride-hailing specialist could either develop an in-house cloud communications platform or look at other third-party providers in a bid to reduce its dependence on just one vendor. Since Uber supplied 12% of Twilio's revenue at that time, the company had to slash its full-year sales growth estimate, leading to a massive sell-off.

But investors shouldn't forget that Uber has a minimum revenue commitment, and it isn't dropping Twilio's services altogether. Moreover, Uber's clout on Twilio's top line has been on the wane. More specifically, Uber supplied just 5% of Twilio's third-quarter 2017 revenue, down from 17% in the fourth quarter of the preceding fiscal year.

Despite this decline in Uber-related revenue, Twilio's base revenue was up 43% in the last reported quarter. The base revenue excludes business from those customers who haven't entered into a minimum 12-month contract with the company. Therefore, the base revenue is effectively business from those customers who have struck long-term agreements with the company, and this metric improved by a big margin last quarter.

Twilio's base revenue grew 63% year over year last quarter after excluding Uber, thanks to the company's focus on aggressively expanding its customer base. Twilio's active customer accounts grew almost 35% year over year during the third quarter. The company has done well to reduce customer concentration, with WhatsApp becoming its biggest supplier of revenue with a contribution of just 6%.