Motley Fool Money - Disney Passes Netflix
Episode Date: August 11, 2022The House of Mouse is firing on all cylinders, and now its total number of subscribers for Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ is greater than Netflix. Dylan Lewis and Maria Gallagher (00:21) discuss: - Disney...’s pricing power and streaming fatigue. - How Coinbase is faring through a Crypto Winter. - What Softbank is telling investors about the private markets. Plus, Nick Sciple interviews Tim Johnston, Co-Founder of Li-Cycle Holdings (15:41), a lithium-ion battery recycler. They discuss how Li-Cycle can meet some of the growing demand for the metals that go into electric cars, and the company’s partnerships with major energy providers. Stocks mentioned: DIS, NFLX, COIN, UBER, SFTBY, LICY Host: Dylan Lewis Guests: Maria Gallagher, Nick Sciple, Tim Johnston Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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There's a new King in streaming video. Well, kind of. Motley Fool money starts now.
I'm Dylan Lewis sitting in for Chris Hill, and I'm joined by Motley Fool premium analyst Maria Gallagher.
Maria, thanks for being here.
Thanks for having me.
Maria, Disney reported earnings after the bell Wednesday, and the results were good news for people who like good news.
Revenue is up 26% year over year.
Operating profit jumped 50% year over year, thanks in large part to a triumphant return for the company's theme park division.
If there were any questions about people's desire to get back out into the world, I think
Disney's Parks Experience and Products Division says it all.
70% year-over-year growth.
And we're seeing that segment come in above pre-pandemic levels.
It was a great quarter for them.
So, like you said, revenue was up 26% to about $21 billion.
Their media and entertainment segment is up about 11%.
Parks, experiences and products up, like you said, 70%.
And what's interesting there is their guest spending grew, so their average per capita
ticket revenue was up, as well as there was higher average daily hotel room rates. And this is
the first quarter or one of the first quarters where cruises operated fully throughout the whole
quarter. So you saw a return in cruises as well. So I think it's really interesting to see the
comeback of the parks business because now they've always had a pretty holistic ecosystem, but now
the holistic ecosystem is really up and running in way it hasn't been able to really run for
the past couple of years. Yeah, I think we're finally seeing a business that is, to quote one of
colleagues firing on all cylinders, right? It's not that certain parts of Disney's business
have to carry along these other struggling parts due to the pandemic. We're kind of seeing these
results materialized because every piece of this business is moving and starting to grow in a
meaningful way. Yeah, absolutely. So if we look at things like Disney Plus, Disney Plus now has on
its own 152 million total subscribers in the US that was up 17%. ESPN Plus has about 22.8 million
and Hulu has about 46.2 million. So they have served.
past Netflix in their total users of $221 million.
And what is also really interesting about this is that their average monthly revenue per
paid subscriber, Hulu's is by far the highest with $87 for the live TV bundle and about
$13 just for video.
And so then Disney plus comes in about $6, ESPN about $4 to $5.
So I do think also with Disney, it's firing on all cylinders even within all of their
segments. So you see strength from each of their video streaming platforms as well as strength
throughout their whole ecosystem. Yeah, it's interesting to see because they are in the grand
scheme of streaming a relatively new entrant, despite being the size that they are and the company
that they are. In addition to them, you know, putting the crown on and saying, hey, we're the new
king of streaming, looking at our numbers. We also got an update on the company's offerings in streaming,
and specifically the way that they're pricing some of their subscription tiers.
Yeah, so I think also what's interesting is, like you're saying, it's kind of newer, but it has so much strength because everyone knows Disney, right?
And so they have this loyalty already baked in the way you see some of these newer streaming services trying to build out franchises.
Disney has over 2,000 active patents compared to Netflix has about 400 patent.
So we just see Disney, I think, is pretty unique in its capability to come in and have such strength so immediately.
And so we are seeing a rate hike.
So we're seeing the ad free tier of Hulu is going to jump to 1499.
There is going to be a price hike for unbundled ESPN Plus.
There's going to be more for Disney Plus as well.
So we are seeing, as is pretty typical of a lot of the streaming services, more of the rate hikes coming in towards the end of 2022.
I feel like pricing power has been one of the main focuses of the last six or so months.
It's been something that we've kind of been looking at to businesses to say, like, do you in an
inflationary environment have the ability to raise prices, maintain the relationship that you have
with customers?
We're seeing these prices come up, and I think to some extent we knew Disney priced low early
so that they'd be able to bring a lot of subscribers on board.
When you see where Disney's offerings are priced now, how do you think it stacks up and
where do you think the ceiling is for them in terms of pricing power?
Do you feel like they have room to run?
That's a great question, and I think it's kind of the million-dollar question.
is how many people are going to get lost with these price hikes.
And so I do think that having those built-in franchises is going to be really good for them,
whereas we see with Netflix there isn't as much loyalty as kind of the rewatch shows.
The only one that's really left on Netflix now is New Girl.
Now there's Seinfeld, but we saw Friends leave.
We saw Parks and Rec leave.
We saw the office leave.
And so I think Disney has a lot of advantage in that a lot of people already have loyalty
to a lot of the options within Disney.
So I think that it has more room to run, but I don't think that the ceiling is that high because most people aren't just buying one service now.
You have multiple services.
So if you're paying more than $15, $20 for a service, that's, I think the top is really between $15 and $20.
And we're starting to see them hit that even with some of their bundled options already.
I know that there's going to be that streaming fatigue as people start to look at all the different things that they're paying for and figure out, okay, what am I actually using on a rolling basis?
And that, I think, to some extent, is going to dictate people's price sensitivities.
One of the other things I was kind of struck by, Maria, just looking at the new offering
and what they're thinking in terms of pricing and tiers is they announced that they had an ad-free
experience moving up to $11 a month from its current price of $7.99.
And at $7.99, they are now going to be offering a lower ad-supported tier.
Is this just basically the future of streaming?
We're looking at cable, but kind of with more steps.
Yeah, I think we've really come full circle.
I remember when DVR started and everyone was so excited to not have commercials.
And then you had Netflix, which was even better.
And now we're back to commercials.
And so I think that's kind of an interesting thing to see that it really comes in a loop and that advertising really pays.
And so they're trying to see the value in that.
And so I wonder how many people are just going to say, fine, I'll just keep watching commercials.
I did it for most of my life.
I guess it's coming back versus how many people are going to say, no, I don't want commercials.
I'm going to pay up, but that means I'm probably going to have some streaming services on the chopping block.
I'll only pay up for two services, as opposed to saying, okay, fine, I'll have everything, but I'll have them all at the cheapest tier.
I think if you're looking for an upside there, it's that you maybe have an opportunity to get up and go to the bathroom while you're watching TV.
You don't have to hit pause as they're streaming shows anymore, but I know some people are going to be a little disappointed about that.
Maria, there were a couple other earnings results that I wanted to touch on from this week, in part just because I think there are some companies out there that are bellwethers for larger trends.
and what we saw in these reports, it's kind of an interesting indication of the dynamics that we're
seeing in those markets. The name that comes to mind to me first is Coinbase. When they reported
earnings earlier this month, we saw a 60 percent decline in revenue year over year and losses
of $5 a share, nearly double what the market had been expecting. We know to some extent this
is really just a business that is going to move with crypto markets in general. You pick any
of their major metrics, that is going to be driven by the performance of crypto and generally
interest and sentiment in crypto.
Were there any numbers that jumped out to you as something that was surprising in what
was kind of a rough report or even worse than maybe the market was making it out to be?
I mean, it was a really interesting report, and they did really go in a lot of depth.
So I have to give them credit for that.
So I think the first one is just the crypto market overall.
It saw declines of over 1.3 trillion.
We saw this echoed, obviously, in Coinbase results.
So their trading volume was down about 30%.
Their transaction revenue was down about 35%.
Their net revenue was down 31%, but their operating expenses were up 8%.
So you saw an operating expense of nearly $2 billion on $803 million in revenue.
So obviously they have to do some pretty intense management of expenses moving forward,
and that's something that I think is really important for them.
You saw they are obviously aware of that with an 18% employee reduction count in June.
Something else that I thought was pretty interesting, though, is their trading volume breakdowns.
So retail investors are a much smaller percentage of their trading volume, but are a much higher
percentage of their revenue.
So we see that institutions have a lot of volume, but they have a low fees and the retail
customers generate more of those fees.
So I think it's going to be really interesting to see, as we're facing a crypto winter,
what those retail investors, how they bounce back and what that looks like.
And then the last thing that I noticed as well is that other crypto assets are about 47% of
their trading volume.
So a lot of users on the platform, they're not only going for Bitcoin in Ethereum.
Bitcoin's about 31%.
Ethereum's about 22%.
But so those other crypto assets are a larger chunk than I thought they would have been on this platform.
So I also think that's going to be something that might change as people are looking to have
some more stability in this very volatile market.
You mentioned crypto-winter.
And if it's reassuring at all to folks that are holding shares of Coinbase in their shareholder
letter management wrote, it's never as good as it seems and it's never as bad as it
seems. And in their materials, they had charted out crypto's rise over the last decade plus
and noted that there were basically four cycles, as they see it, with over 70% declines,
peak to trough each time. When we see times are good with this business, and there's a lot
of interest and activity in the crypto space, this is a solidly profitable company. But we have
to acknowledge it's cyclical and it's going to be at the whims of this larger market. What do you
want to see from them when times aren't good to know that they're positioned to capitalize on
these rises and runs that the overall market will go in?
Yeah, I mean, I just think that highlights such the intense volatility and uncertainty
with four pullbacks that were that massive over the past decade.
So I think that that just kind of underscores the volatility of the market overall.
So at the first iteration, there were kind of different exchanges that no longer exist.
So to be completely transparent, I fall a little bit more on the cryptical side of the
crypto market.
But so I would say that in times like this, obviously cost cutting and focusing on trying to diversify their revenue streams, so they aren't as tightly correlated with this volatility and trying to see some kind of momentum in terms of being sustainably profitable and not being as cyclical.
However, they can manage that cyclicality is just really important, I think.
And we've seen them have some initial signs of success there.
They are trying to launch a subscription business and a subscription revenue stream that gets them a little bit away from more of the.
the activity-based revenue and business model that they currently have.
It's a small part of the overall pie.
But I think if you see signs that that's continuing to grow and become an increasing
piece of the pie for them, they're probably on to something there.
Yeah, absolutely.
They had a 44% growth in the subscription and services revenue.
And so they talk about their highest priority opportunities are things like Coinbase Prime,
the retail app, developer products, Web 3.
So they are definitely trying to do that diversification.
But I wonder how many people are coming out to Coinbase for those diversification offerings
and how many people are just coming to buy or sell Bitcoin and Ethereum.
And I think that that's going to be that what we see over the next couple quarters,
next couple of years, really the test for Coinbase.
One of the other earnings results and kind of follow-on announcements after earnings
that I wanted to focus on was from SoftBank, the telecom turned massive tech investor.
The company posted a record net loss of $24 billion. And this was a large,
largely driven by paper losses on investments in the public and private markets.
The good and the bad of SoftBank is pretty well documented over the last couple years.
We saw when WeWork was going through its massive debacle.
This was a name that was very closely associated with it because they'd been a major
source of funding for WeWork.
There are a lot of other really big public and private names that SoftBank has been associated
with.
I think, Maria, when we're seeing the results come in and we're seeing some of the follow-on
news items after the earnings that have come in. We have to start to question a little bit where
this company is and what it's been doing over the last couple years because we're starting
to see these drawdowns or these paper losses. Yeah, absolutely. And I think it's kind of a signal
of the investing philosophy of a lot of venture changing because really SoftBank came on the scene
and it was so powerful. It had so much money. It kind of changed both the volume and the
intensity with which you could do VC spending. And so seeing
them kind of say, we're going to look at being really critical. We're not looking into
invest anymore. We're going to look. And they are selling a lot of its sale of SoFi, Alibaba,
T-Mobile. And it's also kind of interesting because Alibaba is the first investment that kind of
put SoftBank on the map. So I wonder what the next couple of quarters will look like in terms of
them selling some of their stakes in companies. They own or partially owned so many different
names. They own part of Cameo, Bite Dance, which owns TikTok, Dice, Dedy Grootery, Grocery,
Ding, Dong Fresh, which is another grocery delivery. All throughout the world, they own
parts of Klarna. So I think it's kind of a signal of a new era in VC where we've seen for a very
long time, kind of pretty free-flowing money within the private market space. And I think that this is
kind of a signal that they're working on being maybe a little more critical moving forward,
which I think will be pretty fascinating to watch. Yeah. And, you know,
I think it's particularly interesting because we don't really get a lens into the private
markets all that often.
We can, to some extent, get a sense of what's going on with some of their public stakes.
We saw that they did a very large position in Uber, and they liquidated that position recently,
seemingly at a gain in order to raise some cash.
But we don't necessarily get a look at the valuations of private companies all that often.
And when I see them going and saying, you know what, we are going to wind down some of our position
in our most fabled investment, Alibaba, that really really, you know, we are going to wind down some of our position,
really kind of put us on the map to raise tens of billions of dollars to shore up our cash position,
it does make me think, what we've been seeing from them with their private investments,
we're probably going to start to see some haircuts.
Yeah, absolutely. And I do think that what we've seen also in the past couple years, maybe
past 10 years, is that companies are coming public so much later because there's so much money
in the private market. So unicorns used to be things that you never saw, but now we're seeing
unicorns all the time. And so I think that's also going to be interesting.
is I wonder if with this more frugal idea of VC,
if we're going to see more companies going public
at an earlier stage, which is something
that we haven't seen in quite some time.
So that'll be pretty interesting for me to watch as well.
Maria, thanks so much for joining me today.
Thank you for having me.
To build more electric car batteries,
the big auto manufacturers will have to get creative
finding rare earth metals.
Lycycle is a small cap battery recycler,
hoping to meet the growing demand for lithium for electric cars.
Nick Seiple caught up with Life Cycle co-founder Tim Johnston to talk about his company's
partnerships with major energy providers and its growth plans for the future.
Hey, everybody. I'm Motley Fool, senior analyst Nick Seiple. I'm excited to be here today
with Tim Johnston, co-founder and executive chairman of Lycycle Holdings, a Canadian company
working to become a global leader in battery recycling. Tim, thanks so much for joining me today.
Thanks, Nick. Thanks for having me.
So just to start, why'd you found this company? What's the opportunity you're going after today?
Yeah, absolutely. So I came from the traditional world.
of mining lithium materials, and I was doing that for about 10 years working all over
the world helping companies develop different lithium assets.
But it was clear that whilst we were generating a lot of material to go into what is a very
important part of this new economy that we're developing in terms of lithium ion batteries,
that there really wasn't a good way to recover these materials and return them back to the industry
in a form that's suitable to go back into new batteries and new products.
And so that was really the problem opportunity.
I felt that with my co-founder, RJ Cocha, who is our CEO, that we had the right technical
background to understand how to solve this problem.
We have some experience in technology, development, and business.
And so we really saw that this was a great opportunity to develop and solve a problem
that was really very important for the industry and to be frank for the wider economy.
Absolutely.
And you see headlines pretty regularly today.
with electric vehicle manufacturers talking about supply constraints for some of those key
commodities. When you talk about recycling an electric vehicle battery or lithium ion battery
in general, how do you do that? How do you even start?
So basically, we have a two-part process. We refer to this as the spoken hub model. It follows
both the technology, but then also the business model. So the idea with our spokes, these
are relatively small format pre-processing plants, so where we accept all different forms of lithium
ion batteries. So you can think of everything from the smallest lithium ion battery you might
have at home, maybe from an airport or something like that, all the way up to and including
electric vehicle battery packs, and all the manufacturing scrap that's generated in the process
of making these batteries in the first place. These plants, as I said, a small footprint. We
We have a facility in Canada where we build these plants in-house and then we deploy them.
And today we have three commercially operating.
We have a fourth one that's about to come online here.
And the goal is, and this comes back to the business model, is to have facilities close to where
batteries are being generated.
At the end of the day, one of the biggest costs associated with recycling lithium-ion batteries
today is actually the logistics cost of moving them from wherever this material is.
is generated to the point in which it can be processed into a usable product.
And so we do that.
We developed our own process in order to process these batteries.
At our spoke level, we call this a submerged shredding process.
Basically, we're processing these battery materials all in the one line.
We can process any set of charge, any form factor, any chemistry.
We do it in a safe way whereby we're minimizing the amount of handling that are operators,
have to do with the batteries.
And then at the end of it, what we're doing
is we're producing three key products.
We're producing a low-density plastic product,
which goes on to other secondary uses.
A metallic foil product, which is predominantly copper,
aluminum steel, which goes on to further metal recovery
with that through one of our partners.
But the key thing that we're after through our spoke
network is what we call black mass.
And black mass, putting it very simply, is just the anode and cathode materials from within
the lithium ion batteries.
It's where your graphite, your nickel, cobalt, lithium, manganese, they all reside within
what we call this black mass.
Now that we've turned the batteries, which are somewhat heavy, difficult to handle into these
intermediate materials, we now have a product that is safe and easy to transport.
These materials are non-flammable, you can ship them in bulk, you can do all sorts of
wonderful things that reduce the cost coming back to the economics of getting it
to a refining facility and that's our hub so today we're constructing a hub facility
in Rochester it's for 35,000 tons per year of this black mass material to the
equivalent material of about 90,000 electric vehicles if you want to think about it
in that terms and what we do with the refinery of the hub is that we then take
that black mass material and we turn it back
into the materials. So coming back to, you know, RJ and I's original background coming
from the battery industry, the chemical industry, was what we're doing is we're producing
materials that are fit for purpose to go back into the lithium ion battery sector.
And that's a major facility. It will be one of the largest of its kind in the world where
it's complete. We're on track for starting commissioning next year. Very, very exciting
time for that. But most importantly, for the industry, it's going to be the first large
style demonstration, at least in the Western world, of this ability to really close the loop
for these lithium mine battery materials. When I think about it with these spokes, it's basically
this giant shredder with some hydrochemical treating to put it into this usable form,
that this black mass that you then send out to the hub that will treat that into a usable
form. You almost think about it like an oil refinery.
Maybe. You mentioned, though, this will be the first of its kind. So far, you have some test facilities,
but you haven't scaled up to this massive full-scale facility. So what are the obstacles now between
where you are today and reaching that full-scale production?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, at our spoke level, we are commercial today. We process thousands
of tons of batteries per year through our spoke network. And as you said, we built a demonstration
plant. We ran it for about 12 months processing black mass in Canada through to the same
materials that we'll be producing in Rochester using the same process. And so we've gone through
that. We've done a lot of work on the engineering development. We've secured offtake for all of
our end products. We're only able to do that because of that early work that we did. So going
forward, really the key thing that we're focused on now is really execution. We have two
great partners that are working with us in the development of the hub in Rochester being
hatched and mass tech on the construction side. These are large global firms, you know,
very, very capable when it comes to both engineering and construction management. And so
now we're working through with them. With our team, collectively, we're building out the asset
and I'm very much looking forward to completing the project.
Sure. So you talk about some of these engineering partnerships to actually construct the facility.
Other partnerships are also important to this business.
You've signed some deals with Glincor, LG Chem. You're working with Ultium Cells,
which is the partnership with GM and LG Chem to make batteries.
Can you talk about some of the partnerships you've made and how you're using that to help fund the business
to actually build these facilities, right? It takes cash to make these things happen.
Yeah, absolutely. It's a capital-intensive process. We've raised over a billion.
dollars to date. Since we went public about 12 months ago, we've partnered up with, there's really
three key partnerships. The first was with Coke Industries. Coke is a big international industrial
firm. The great thing about their partnership is that they are increasing their investment,
involvement across the battery sector, which is helping us form strong commercial partnerships,
but also they're very strong on the engineering and operational readiness side of it.
So they've been a great resource for us to be able to work with
and help steer the project down the right path.
But then going forward, we did an investment with LG.
So LG made an equity investment in Life Cycle earlier this year.
It was the first recycling investment that they had made.
They are today the largest producer of electric vehicle lithium ion batteries in the world.
And so a great cornerstone partnership as we work with them.
As part of that deal was really truly closing the loop in the sense that there's an agreement
whereby we receive materials from the manufacturing of their lithium ion batteries
and we're providing their materials back from our hub facility in Rochester.
The latest was with Glencore.
And Glencore today is one of the largest producers of nickel and cobalts in the world.
They have operating assets all over the world that support the existing lithium ion battery sector.
And what we saw with the partnership with Glencourt was more than just capital.
It was really an ability to partner with a significant organization when it comes to ability to build out additional assets going in.
to the future. We're doing a lot of work with them on our next phase of growth. And what we're
really focusing on is trying to leverage their expertise. They are truly experts when it comes
to producing finished metals. They go into lithium ion battery sector. And they've been a
great partner up until this point. I'm sure they will be going forward.
All right. So we've talked about your plan that you're moving forward with the Rochester
hub, making some of these significant partners.
today, company burning a fair amount of cash as you reach this full scale. Where do you see
the kind of path to reaching self-funding and maybe capital needs for the business to reach
that point?
Yeah, absolutely. We're fully funded for everything we've announced to date. We have seven spokes
that we've announced to date that are in various stages of operation and construction.
Yeah, our facility in Rochester, we're fully funded for that all the way to
through commissioning and start up there.
So there's no real initial capital needs for the business today.
So going forward, we're not looking at bringing on any additional equity or anything
like that in the near term.
What we're really focused on is execution.
In terms of going and turning to profitability, we haven't put out specific guidance in terms
of when that may be, but it's very clear to those.
who follow the business closely, the hub in Rochester will be a key catalyst for the business.
It's a great business unto itself. And once that's complete, that will definitely be a significant
step change for the organization.
Certainly. So the hub in Rochester, obviously, is the priority today. You mentioned that
being a significant catalyst, but moving forward, you have aims to build facilities in Norway, Germany.
So moving on from North America to Europe, as you look at future hubs, or maybe a other
hubs in North America. How should we think about that?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, once again, we haven't said anything specific in terms of where the
next major facilities will be. We are building out spokes today in Germany and Norway,
which are moving ahead well and looking forward to having them complete.
We are continuing to assess options to build out additional refining capacity in the future.
But as we do that, we'll make sure that we have a fully fledged business plan, which aligns
with both what we're doing, but also where the market is and where our partners are as part of that.
So we'll come back to you with more information when we're able to on that.
So the last question I always like to leave folks when I do these interviews is, okay, so
for a potential investor, a market watcher who's listened to this podcast, listen to this interview,
what would be your kind of one or two, three bullet points you'd want them to leave?
this conversation with, want them to remember about Lycycle going forward?
Yeah, absolutely. I think when it comes to evaluating recycling technologies and evaluating what
people are doing, I think it's important to consider both the technical aspects and the business
model. For Lycycle, the important parts for our business model is that we have this diverse
network of spoke facilities that allow us to improve the overall economics for processing lithium
batteries. We also, we haven't really touched on this very much in this discussion, but we also
have a very strong focus on how we do it. And so when you talk about what we're doing, we're
processing lithium ion batteries in a way where we're not generating any waste water. We're
not generating any meaningful air emissions. We're definitely not burning off plastics and organics
as part of the process. It's a process that works in lockstep with the industry and why this industry
exist in the first place. And we'll continue to grow. We're going to have one of the major refining
facilities for the first half of this decade. It's going to be online here in North America.
And it will be a very, very important part of the fabric of lithium ion battery, not just recycling,
but product development globally.
Tim, thank you so much. I really enjoyed this conversation. Really excited to watch
life cycle as it develops, and as the lithium ion battery industry as a whole, it's set to grow
in a significant way. Thank you, Nick. Appreciate your time. As always, people on the program may have
interests in the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or
against. So don't buy or sell anything based solely on what you hear. I'm Dylan Lewis. Thanks for
listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
