Why Young Students and Investors Can't Agree About Facebook
Facebook (FB) is set to report FQ4 2013 earnings after the market closes on Wednesday, January 29th. Over the past couple of quarters Facebook has blown analyst expectations out of the water, and the stock has gone crazy more than doubling. However, a few recent high profile studies have begun to sound the alarms on the social network and claim that it's already in decline. A recent paper out of Princeton which studied the growth of Facebook claimed that it 'spread like an infectious disease' and said it would also die like a virus, losing 80% of its users by 2017.
Another equally doom saying study released in December by researchers at University College London has stated that Facebook is "dead and buried" for teens and that it's "simply not cool any more". Regardless of these publications, the fact is that Facebook has grown both its EPS and revenue on a year over year basis in each of the past 8 quarters and as of September 2013, Facebook touts 847 million active monthly users. Here's what the buy side and students expect from Facebook's earnings report on Wednesday, and how they differ.
The information below is derived from data submitted to the Estimize.com platform by a set of Buy Side and Independent analyst contributors.
(Click Here to see All Estimates for Facebook)Over the previous 6 quarters the EPS and revenue forecasts from Estimize.com have been more accurate than Wall Street 4 and 5 times respectively. By tapping into a wider range of contributors including hedge-fund analysts, asset managers, independent research shops, non professional investors, and students Estimize has created a data set that is up to 69.5% more accurate than Wall Street, but more importantly it does a better job of representing the market's actual expectations. This quarter there is significant disagreement between students and the buy-side.
Estimize
The distribution of estimates published by analysts on the Estimize.com platform range from 25c to 33c EPS and $2.200B to $2.560B in revenues. This quarter we're seeing a moderate distribution of estimates compared to previous quarters.
The size of the distribution of estimates relative to previous quarters often signals whether or not the market is confident that it has priced in the expected earnings already. A wider distribution of estimates signaling less agreement in the market, which could mean greater volatility post earnings.
This quarter we've seen upward analyst revisions from both Wall Street and Estimize. The Wall Street EPS consensus has increased throughout the quarter from 23c to 27c while the Estimize consensus for EPS has inched higher from 28c to 29c. Wall Street has also increased its revenue forecast throughout the quarter from $2.221B to $2.355B while the Estimize community has revised its consensus upward from $2.303B to $2.366B. Timeliness is correlated with accuracy and rising analyst revisions going into a report is often a bullish indicator.
The analyst with the highest estimate confidence rating this quarter is WallStreetBean who projects 29c EPS and $2.402B in revenue. In the Winter 2014 season, WallStreetBean is rated as the 15th best analyst and is ranked 9th overall among over 3,600 contributing analysts. Estimate confidence ratings are calculated through algorithms developed by deep quantitative research which looks at correlations between analyst track records and tendencies as they relate to future accuracy. In this case the analyst with the highest rated estimate is making a bullish call predicting that Facebook will report inline with Estimize on profit but exceed on revenue.
This quarter the aggregate consensus from the Estimize community is that Facebook will beat Wall Street expectations on both EPS and revenue. However, the buy-side is more optimistic than the students. Wednesday evening after the dust settles we will know which side was right.
Get access to estimates for Facebook published by your Buy Side and Independent analyst peers and follow the rest of earnings season by heading over to Estimize.com. Register for free to create your own estimates and see how you stack up to Wall Street.