PlayAGS (NYSE: AGS), a recent addition to our Battle Road IPO Review Consumer sector coverage, is based in Las Vegas, Nevada. Founded in 2003, PlayAGS sells electronic gaming machines, including slot machines, video bingo machines, as well as back office systems to casinos and various gaming entities. Consensus estimates call for revenue of $259 million and a loss of $0.21 in 2018.
PlayAGS made its debut on the NYSE on January 25, 2018 in a 10.3 million share IPO priced at $16 per share, with all proceeds going to PlayAGS, raising over $150 million in net proceeds. The IPO was led by large underwriting team, consisting of Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Jeffries, Macquarie Capital, BofA Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, Nomura, Stifel, SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, and others.
Historically focused on the Native American gaming market, in which it estimates that it holds a 20 percent market share of all Class II electronic gaming machines (EGMs), PlayAGS has expanded into new segments, after having been acquired with funds provided by Apollo Global in 2013. While revenue from EGMs accounts for 94 percent of revenue, the company has expanded into other North American gaming markets, and introduced interactive and table game products that account for the remainder. The company estimates that it has over 22,000 recurring revenue EGMs, and over 38,000 daily active users for its mobile games.
We note that two geographic markets accounted for roughly 36 percent of total revenue in the 12 months ended September 30, 2017. Oklahoma comprised 24 percent of EGM revenue, with the Chickasaw Nation, a Native American gaming operator in Oklahoma, accounting for 11 percent of revenue, while the Poarch Band of Creek Indians, a Native American gaming operator in Alabama, accounted for 12 percent.
Through the first nine months of 2017, PlayAGS recorded revenue of $154 million, with operating income of $68 million, excluding depreciation and amortization, up 24 percent from $124 million during the same period in 2016, when it recorded $45 million in operating income, excluding depreciation and amortization. Having raised over $150 million in its IPO, PlayAGS has dramatically improved its balance sheet, which featured just $10 million in cash and $580 million in debt prior to its IPO.
Roku (NASDAQ: ROKU), a provider of television streaming devices, and advertising services, becomes the most recent addition to our Battle Road IPO Review Hardware coverage. Founded in 2002, and based in Los Gatos California, the company is best known for its Roku family of internet streaming devices, having been a pioneer in the field. The company is led by founder and CEO Anthony Wood. Steve Louden, CFO, joined Roku in June of 2015, after having held various finance roles at Expedia, between 2009 and 2015, including VP of corporate finance, and treasurer. Consensus estimates call for revenue of $485 million and a Loss Per Share of $0.64 in the current year, while next year, the company is expected to reach $625 million in revenue, and record a loss of $0.50.
Roku made its debut on the NASDAQ on September 28, in a 15.7 million Class A share IPO, priced at $14 per share. The IPO closed on October 1st, with the underwriters having exercised the option to purchase an additional 2.4 million shares. In all, the company sold 10.4 million shares, while selling shareholders sold 7.7 million shares. Importantly, the company’s Class B shares contain 10x the voting power of the Class B shares sold to the public, and Class B shareholders retain 98 percent of the voting rights post offering. Combined, there are now roughly 97 million shares outstanding. At a recent price of $38, Roku has a market cap of roughly $3.8 billion. The IPO was led by Morgan Stanley, Citigroup Capital Markets, Allen & Company, RBC Capital Markets, Needham & Company, Oppenheimer, and William Blair. Roku has a 180 day lock-up period that expires on March 27, 2018.
Best known for its family of internet streaming devices, Roku, in its current incarnation, was essentially a spin-out from Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX), which had conducted work to develop and manufacture its own television streaming device about a decade ago. Upon further reflection, however, Netflix concluded that selling its own streaming device would undercut its efforts to persuade other manufacturers of such devices to support Netflix’s television and movie streaming content. A new company was created, under the name Roku, and each party was free to pursue its rivals to support its devices and content separately.
With Anthony Wood at the helm, therefore, grew up alongside Netflix, as one of the first commercially successful streaming device manufacturers in the early days of internet TV. Though Roku continues to garner the largest installed base of internet streaming devices, its success has since drawn numerous competitors into the market, including Apple, Amazon.com, and Google, all of which offer internet television streaming devices.
Today, Roku offers five different devices, priced between $29.99 and $99.99 at retail. For all of 2016, the company’s devices accounted for roughly 74 percent of revenue, with advertising and subscription revenue sharing accounting for the remainder. In 2016, device revenue grew by nine percent over the prior year. Gross margin from devices was roughly 15 percent, attesting to the price competitiveness of the category. In the first half of 2017, device revenue contracted by two percent versus the prior year, while gross margin fell from 17 percent to just 12 percent.
The more exciting part of Roku’s business is what it refers to as “platform,” which includes advertising and subscription revenue sharing. Using its position as a Switzerland-style provider of streaming services, unencumbered by ties to any of the cable network or internet streaming service providers, Roku has developed relationships with advertisers that are eager to take part in the trend toward internet television, and provide ads to internet television watchers. Through its opt in system, Roku is able to record the preferences of viewers, presumably capturing important demographic data that enables advertisers to reach their intended audience more efficiently. Roku claims 15 million such subscribers from among the total number of devices sold.
Today, advertising accounts for 67 percent of the company’s platform revenue, which totaled $82 million in the first half of 2017, up 91 percent from the prior year. Platform revenue grew from 27 percent of sales in the first half of 2016 to 41 percent in the first half of 2017. Platform gross margin was 76 percent in the first half of 2017, up from 71 percent in the first half of 2016. As a result of the shift in revenue mix, the company was able to achieve 23 percent revenue growth in the first half of 2017, along with a gross margin of 38 percent, considerably higher than the 31 percent achieved in the prior year.
While the above-mentioned trends narrowed the company’s operating losses, Roku still has much work ahead if it intends to run a profitable business. The company’s operating loss was $43 million in 2016. Its operating loss was $21 million in the first half of 2017, an improvement over the $32 million operating loss of 1H 2016. Despite the favorable trends in revenue and gross margin, Roku ramped up its R&D spending by 25 percent, reaching $48 million in the first half of the year, or 24 percent of total revenue, an exorbitant sum, which calls into question its desire or plan to improve profitability.
Over the last few years, the competitive landscape has intensified, with Apple, Amazon.com, and Google having introduced a variety of new devices into the market, as the battle for the living room spawned by the rise of internet television viewing continues. Overall, we are intrigued by Roku’s approach, which provides benefits for viewers, advertisers, and content creators. Nevertheless, we would prefer to see solid evidence of reaching and sustaining profitability, particularly given its current valuation, which has rallied dramatically in the last week, after reporting results for its first quarter as a public company.
Post IPO, Roku has a very good balance sheet with an estimated net cash position of $245 million post-offering, inclusive of $23 million in long term debt. Nonetheless, given the expectation for continued losses this year and next, the stock ranks near the very bottom of our Hardware sector coverage.