Motley Fool Money - Twitter in Limbo, Amazon in the Spotlight
Episode Date: July 11, 2022Elon Musk and Twitter are headed to a Delaware courtroom. (0:21) Jason Moser discusses: - How messy the current situation is for Twitter's employees and shareholders - The potential for another compa...ny to swoop in and buy Twitter - Why Amazon's combination of retail and AWS make it the business he's most curious about this earnings season (14:30) Rachel Warren talks with Matt Kolby, VP of Investor Relations for Indeed, about the trends driving today's labor market and the implications for one lesser-known tech giant. Stocks mentioned: TWTR, CRM, AMZN, RCRUY Host: Chris Hill Guests: Jason Moser, Rachel Warren, Matt Kolby Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Twitter, its shareholders and employees are in the one place you never want to be.
Limbo.
Motley Fool Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill, and I'm joined by Motley Fool Senior analyst, Jason Moser.
Happy Monday.
Happy Monday.
Unless you're a Twitter shareholder.
Well, or employee.
I've got to believe you're an employee is probably worse than being a shareholder.
We'll get to all of that.
Let me just pull back the curtain a minute because this has only happened, I believe, three times.
In the 12-plus years, we've been doing the weekly Motley Full Money radio show.
And what I'm referring to is we record the show midday on Friday,
and then late in the day, there is breaking business news that is so big,
we think, boy, if this had broken just a few hours earlier,
this might have led the show.
This would have been in the first segment of the show.
And to my memory, only the third time in 12-plus years, that happened this past Friday,
because we recorded the show, and then around 5 o'clock, the news broke that Elon Musk is walking
away from his deal to buy Twitter.
He alleges that Twitter underreported the number of bots on the platform.
This whole situation now moves to a court in Delaware where place your bets, people, on
what the outcome is going to be.
Musk could be forced to pay the $1 billion breakup fee.
It's theoretically possible.
Both sides just walk away.
He could be forced to do the deal, which seems like a not great situation to force someone
to buy a company.
This is going to be messy, Jason, and shares of Twitter are close to their lowest point in
more than four years.
Yeah.
I mean, you're right.
to be messy. I think this is ultimately, I feel like this is intentional on his part. I feel
like he's sort of playing them, so to speak. I think he's essentially pushing this to get as much
information as possible from the company, and potentially possibly a lower price along with it.
I mean, it's a gamble. I think he was more or less baiting them, and he wanted this to go to court
because he wasn't, at least as he sees it, he wasn't getting satisfactory information.
And I mean, that's going to be something ultimately for the courts to decide, right?
He feels like Twitter, the company, is not acted in good faith.
They've not provided the information that he asked for when the deal was first inked.
They feel otherwise.
And so then you get this to the court where ultimately, and I think, you know, he tweeted this out earlier,
today. I mean, you take this to court, and ultimately, that's where this information is going
to have to come to light, right? I mean, I think at the end of the day, regardless when this goes to
court, he's going to get the information he's been looking for. And that's going to result in
potentially him just going ahead and making this acquisition on the terms that were originally
agreed to, or if it turns out that that information that they were giving him in regard to the
bots in specific, if it turns out that they were not being forthright or not giving the
complete picture, maybe it results in not only getting that information, but also then getting
a lower price. I mean, you look at it today, I mean, I think, I mean, Twitter shares are down
something like close to 40 percent from the original agreed upon price. So, I mean, that's
significant. I can understand him wanting to get a better price, whether that actually happens
or not remains to be seen. But this to me feels very much intentional on his part. I mean,
it feels kind of like he's viewing this as sort of a chess match, and this was his latest move.
You mentioned the employees at Twitter, and this is something, you and I were talking about this
earlier today. This is one of those things that I don't think we, I'll just speak for myself,
I don't think about this as quickly as I think about what happens when a company announces layoffs.
Because I think we do a pretty good job on this show.
Anytime we're talking about a company that has announced layoffs,
we talk about what it means for the business.
And we acknowledge that for the people who are being laid off, that just sucks.
You know, in a lot of cases, there are people who are doing a good job going about their business,
and maybe through no fault of their own, they're being let go.
I don't think as much about the companies where the status of the business is in limbo.
And this is kind of an extreme situation with Twitter.
But it does happen more frequently just with acquisitions in general.
Think about something like Activision Blizzard, which is, you know, at the beginning of the year, Microsoft says we're going to buy them.
And the deal is going to take about 18 months to close.
And if you work at Activision Blizzard, you're like, okay, it's, you're like, okay, it's, you're going to buy them.
So, in 11 months, we're going to find out whether or not we're bought.
In some cases, it's a business where the acquisition is happening, but the acquiring company
has come out and said right off the bat, we might be selling off parts of this.
I don't know.
It has me thinking, Jason, that it might be a worthwhile exercise to just look at my portfolio
and look at each company and think, wait, is this company in any way in limbo?
When we talk about the culture at a company and is this a good place to work and our employees
motivated, that's so much harder to do. As you indicated right at the top, it's so much harder
to do when you're in a situation like the employees at Twitter.
Yeah. I mean, I would go even probably a step further and say it is downright impossible
to do. I mean, there is a level of uncertainty that's been lobbed into Twitter, the company,
that, I mean, there are certain employees, right, executive level employees that they're going
to be fine regardless, right?
I mean, no matter what happens, I mean, they're financially relatively secure.
But I mean, for most of the workforce, that just isn't the case.
I think you're right.
I mean, the day-to-day uncertainty with just wondering, I mean, not only am I going to have
a job, but I mean, even if I do, is this going to be a company where I want to work?
I mean, there are a lot of folks who are concerned that really, maybe what Musk wants to do with
Twitter isn't really in line with the company that they came on board with.
I mean, obviously, things change in the business world, and companies grow and they evolve.
But generally speaking, I mean, yeah, it does feel like the employees are really getting stuck
in just an untenable situation here.
I certainly understand why many are updating LinkedIn profiles.
And I feel like it's more than reasonable to start looking around because you just don't
know what's going to happen. For someone who is relying on that job, not maybe necessarily
living paycheck to paycheck, but, you know, listen, they need the job. Like, most of us need the job,
right? It's our source of financial security to an extent. And they don't get to go to work
every day with that general feeling of security, knowing that where they work is really looking
looking out for them because so much is now completely out of the company's control.
I mean, Twitter historically has been fairly mismanaged.
I think you can make that argument pretty well.
And this really just seems to be sort of another notch in that belt, so to speak.
So it's very understandable the frustration that is building there among the workforce.
It seems like it's darn near impossible to build any kind of a culture.
And culture is going to be defined differently by everyone, I assume.
But at the end of the day, it generally results in a place where people want to be and where
people are proud to work.
And I'm sure that is not the feeling among most employees there today.
And that's going to play out of the business performance.
There's no question there, right?
I mean, that's going to play out of the business performance.
Last question before we move on.
Let's say the deal falls apart one way or another, whether it pays the breakup fee or not.
and Twitter is left on its own again.
I believe it was six years ago that Salesforce was taking a long, hard look at buying Twitter.
What odds would you place on Mark Benioff and his team coming in and saying,
we're not going to pay $54 a share, but we'll pay $40?
I would venture that as probably slim to none.
It feels like the story of Twitter has done nothing but yet worse as time has gone on.
I mean, that kind of goes back to the platform being mismanaged.
I mean, the guidelines, the community guidelines and rules have always seemed to be somewhat
arbitrarily enforced.
And it seems to have gotten nothing but messier as time has gone on.
And again, I mean, that just kind of goes back to, I mean, it's very difficult to build
and grow a company when there's no real consistent vision and
consistent management, right? And Twitter has just never benefited from that consistency of vision.
It felt like for a time that was coming back with Dorsey at the helm. Clearly, he's not there
anymore. I really do believe, I mean, I think that Dorsey is on to something when he says
it really, the first step is to take this company back from Wall Street. I think that Twitter is
better off as a private company or part of a bigger entity, right, where it is out.
out of the spotlight because it just cannot go on the way it is today. It doesn't feel like,
it feels like at this point, very difficult to put the toothpaste back in the tube, right? No matter
who steps into that executive office, the hurdles, right? The task at hand, I think, is just,
it's, as Michael Scott would say, insurmountable.
At the end of this week, earnings season is going to kick off with the big banks reporting. When you
think about earnings season. What is a company that you're particularly curious to see report?
Well, I don't know that I'm going to pan out here a little bit. I'm going to cheat.
I'm not going to point one specific company because I feel like there's so much going on.
It's difficult to just focus on one individual company. It really does feel like looking at where the
market is today, right? If you look at the market year today, the S&P is down around 19%,
NASDAQ is down around 27%. Now, if you look at those numbers since the last earnings season,
the S&P is down 12%, and the NASDAQ is down 15%. And so I think really, for me, we've just,
you know, last earning season was a very difficult one. It felt like no matter what company
reported, no matter what they reported, the market just wasn't having any of it. And I mean,
If I'm going to pick one company, it does feel like Amazon is going to be an interesting
one to watch just because it ties so much to not only consumer behavior, but also the tech
world through Amazon Web Services. You get a better idea, I think, just on how the consumer
is feeling right now. I mean, Amazon came off of a couple of years of phenomenal growth,
right, in the retail side of the business. And that more or less has hit a wall here.
And I really, I wonder if that is something we can expect for the rest of the year, right?
They've got Prime Day coming up in the third quarter of the year.
And so we obviously won't get that for another couple of quarters, really.
But ultimately, I mean, we've talked about this before.
They really built out capacity, over, overbuilt that capacity over the past couple of years.
It was for understandable reasons.
now they're really trying to figure out exactly how to deal with that.
It's impacting their earnings to the extent where they don't really have a lot of control over
it.
So there's going to be some time that needs to lapse in order for that to really start playing
back in their favor.
I think the capacity will ultimately play back in their favor, but they need a little bit of
time to get back to where the consumer is feeling a little bit more willing to spend.
And maybe that's something that starts in the third quarter with Prime Day and sort of
accelerates as we go into the holiday season.
It'll be interesting to see how management is looking at the back half of the year, because
it does feel like those signals will tell us a lot about a lot of the rest of the retail
segment.
But we know that Amazon Web Services continues to be really the rock star of the business.
And I don't think that, I don't see any reason why that shouldn't continue.
Jason Moser, thanks so much for being here.
Thank you.
Speaking of Twitter employees updating their resumes,
up next, we've got a look at the job market
with one of the companies leading its evolution.
Matt Colby is the vice president of investor relations
for Indeed, the popular job search engine.
Motleyful contributor Rachel Warren caught up with Colby
to talk about the top trends driving today's labor market
and the implications for one lesser-known tech giant.
I think what's been happening in the dynamics of the job market or something that's top of mind, you know, for a lot of job seekers as well as companies, you know, movements like the Great Resignation have impacted companies across a wide range of industries.
You know, so jumping off of that a little bit, what are some of the most prominent trends that you're seeing from your vantage point in the U.S. job market right now?
And beyond that, how is it impacting Indeed's performance?
So we're a global tech company serving more than 250 million people across indeed each month.
And so we're seeing three main trends in the labor force.
So number one, it's an aging workforce problem.
So baby boomers are aging and retiring every year.
And the average age is, well, actually 25% of the labor force is greater than,
than 55. So again, aging workforce is becoming a problem. Net immigration declining each year
is something else that we've seen. So since 2015, we've seen declining immigration. There was a
surplus in the U.S. of more than one million immigrants back in 2015. And the most recent year,
that surplus was only 270,000. So obviously, the pandemic has significantly impacted that.
but across most developed countries, we're seeing immigration declining.
And then lastly, and this is probably a product of the pandemic,
is changing attitudes towards work-life balance.
So this is really, especially among the younger generation,
we're seeing less demand for certain types of jobs and greater demand for flexibility.
And on indeed, we've seen three times the number of job postings
or including remote options or flexible options.
And job seekers, when they're searching,
are searching five times more than they did before the pandemic,
for remote and flexible jobs.
So that's clearly a trend of flexibility that seems to be here to stay.
And what does it mean for our performance?
Well, it means there's a lot of changing, a lot of job turnover.
You continue to see the overall quits rate from the labor stats,
remains very, very high. And tight labor markets are continuing to exist. So what it means is
the increasing need for our solutions and our products that make it easier and make it simpler
for employers to find candidates and for people to find jobs. And we saw this past year,
revenue grew 92% in what we call our HR tech segment, off a base of $3.5 billion of revenue.
So we almost doubled revenue in the last year.
And we saw our EBITDA, which is our profitability, grow from 600 million to 2.6 billion.
So we've seen tremendous growth.
But most of that came from volume.
So the number of jobs dramatically, the number of sponsor jobs dramatically increased.
And the number of employers advertising on indeed increased as well.
And we expect these trends to continue to persist.
And this next year, we expect to grow about 10 to 20 percent.
revenue growth is what we've guided for.
You know, we look at how much the labor market has changed, and you mentioned some of these
key trends that are driving hiring practices right now. If you look back, you know, over the last
five years, say, to now, what do you think are some of the key factors that have changed
the most, you know, in the recruiting and hiring sector, and then specifically for Indeed?
In the past five years, we've made significant progress towards this idea of, you know,
of making it as easy as possible to find a job by pushing a button.
And really, our strategy is not changing, but it's really just been accelerated.
And we have this relentless focus on this mission to help job seekers.
And what we're doing is we're moving beyond just finding candidates to what we say is getting
closer to the hire.
And we're focused on delivering qualified candidates.
And to do this, we need to understand job seekers better.
So we need to understand the preference, not just looking at a resume, but understanding, well, do they want to commute or do they not want to commute? How long do they want to, how close to their home do they want to work? What type of work environment do they want to want to be working in? And the more we know about job seekers, the better we can match them to the perfect job. And we really, indeed is built for everyone. Really, we want to have all people find jobs across all types of employment. So full time, part-time.
temporary, temporary work at all levels and at all wage levels as well. And we've made significant
progress based on what we can measure. So we've seen before the pandemic, 10 hires per minute
on our platform. This was in the first quarter of the calendar year in 2019. And this last
quarter, it's doubled to 20 hires per minute on our platform that we can measure. So we know
we're making progress. We have a lot of work to do, but it still takes 15 weeks to find a job
on Indeed and in general, and we're focused on shortening this time in half by 2030. We've
actually made a commitment to do that. As we mentioned, Indeed is part of the global tech company
recruit, which just reported strong earnings results, as you mentioned, thanks to very strong revenue
growth in HR Tech, which is made up mostly of Indeed. So maybe, you know, walk me through a bit
Indeed's performance this past quarter. What's what's driving the company's growth and how is that
impacting its parent company recruit? Indeed is part of this, this large Japanese company
recruit holdings. Recruit is a 62-year-old company with a 55 billion market cap, as you said,
and one of the top 10 largest companies in Japan and actually one of the 300 largest companies
in the world. And recruits revenue is $25.5 billion in the last fiscal year, has
46,000 employees and that revenue grew 25%, 26% actually year over year. It's actually one of
the largest tech companies in the world that people haven't, many haven't heard of. And so Indeed,
it was acquired by recruit in 2012. And again, most people don't know that. But with Indeed and
Glass Store, which is our sister company, which was also acquired by recruit, we have what we call
this HR tech segment. And this creates this two-sided talent marketplace that has really been a
big driver of growth for recruit holdings overall and a driver of recruits overall profitability.
And recruit has a strategic pillar called Simplify Hiring. This is, it is what it's called,
just making it easy. And indeed, in Glass Door, really at the center of that strategy.
and 85% of recruits revenue is HR-related businesses.
So it is the most important strategic pillar for recruit holdings.
And again, HR Tech segment did about $7.5 billion of revenue up 92% year-over-year,
with margins that expanded to 34%.
And even this next year, we guided to EBITDA margins to be around 30%.
But in terms of overall revenue growth, HR Tech has contributed,
you had more than 70% of the revenue growth for recruit in the last fiscal year, and more than
60% of recruits overall EBITDA. So clearly this is a very important business for recruit,
and it's a driver for the growth for the future. Moving forward, what do you think are some of
the most prominent catalysts for growth that you expect will be driving the direction of Indeed's
business? So we are in the HR business. And HR,
is a cyclical business, but we think, again, there's a huge opportunity to go from where we are
today in this slow, painful process of hiring and finding a job to this nirvana of pushing
a button and finding that perfect job. And we think technology will definitely be a catalyst,
and we think AI and automation are going to help make that a reality. The pandemic has been a
catalyst for adoption or accelerating the adoption of these new hiring tools and the appetite
to transform the way people hire, like video or virtual interviewing processes.
And majority of job search actually today is happening on mobile apps, on people's phones,
smartphones. And actually interviews are taking place on phones as well.
So the way people are searching for jobs and interacting with potential jobs is very different today.
And that increased transparency I talked about before, we think is a catalyst.
So more information, reviews, and transparency is going to drive some of that change.
And broadly, when you think about the labor markets, so tight labor markets, it was tight
before the pandemic.
And today it remains very tight as well.
And we expect that to be a catalyst or a trend that continues and the need to lower the
cost.
We think that's a trend that's going to drive our business forward.
And lastly, we're evolving our pricing model.
And this is something I haven't talked about yet, but we are trying to evolve our pricing
model to align more closely to what the employer wants and the outcomes.
they're looking for. So we think that, and that's a hire. Like people come to Indeed,
they post a job. Why? Because they want to ultimately make a higher. And we want to be able to
always deliver value for every dollar they're spending with us. And that, actually, that,
that value or that mentality forces us to improve our product and continue to make things better.
And always make sure that we're delivering that value and having good outcomes or positive outcomes
for our clients and for job seekers.
So it's early days, but we think that will continue to be a catalyst to drive our business forward.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about,
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against.
So don't buy yourself stocks based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
