Meet the Monster Stock that Continues to Crush the Market

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Spotify Technology (NYSE: SPOT) has been one of the best-performing technology stocks in the world since going public in 2018. The journey has been bumpy, though. Shares have produced a 19% annual total return compared to 14% for the S&P 500 index, meaning that Spotify has beaten the market over the last seven years.

However, in 2021 and 2022, the Spotify story looked dire. The music and audio streaming platform had an 80% drawdown as investors worried about a lack of profitability with its business model. Since falling to $75 a share, the stock has rallied in the last two years in a remarkable comeback for the company, which is now worth close to $100 billion in market capitalization.

And yet, the stock is rarely talked about in investing circles, even after this run-up. Here’s the generally overlooked story of Spotify’s stock market comeback, and whether you should buy shares today.

Late 2022 was a dark period for Spotify. This was the depths of the stock’s decline. Wall Street was concerned about the company’s deteriorating operating margin, which fell to negative 7% in the third and fourth quarters of that year.

Due to its ambitious expansion into podcasts, advertising, and other new segments, Spotify’s operating expenses were growing faster than revenue. Gross margins were also slipping with increased costs for podcast content on expensive licensing deals.

In the two years since, Spotify’s margins have made a miraculous turnaround. The reason for this improvement is simple: It got disciplined with expenses. Through layoffs and fewer content licensing deals, operating expenses have fallen from their peak, while gross margins hit an all-time high of 31.1% in the third quarter of this year. At the same time, revenue kept growing and was up 19% year over year last quarter.

Greater spending discipline has led to a big improvement in operating margin, which hit a positive 11.4% last quarter, surpassing management’s previous goal of reaching a 10% profit margin that it set forth back at its Investor Day in 2022. This is fantastic progress for a business that many believed could never turn a profit, which is why the stock price is up by a multiple of 5 in less than two years.

SPOT total operating expenses (TTM), data by YCharts; TTM = trailing 12 months.

Revenue growth has accelerated in recent quarters, hitting 19% in the third quarter. Price hikes across the globe for its premium subscriptions were the main reason for this growth. The company has been able to implement significant price increases in places like the United States with little to no increases in customer churn, which indicates it is underpricing its premium music service.

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