Why Investors Should Stop Worrying About Square's Guidance

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Square's (NYSE: SQ) stock recently tumbled after the payment service provider posted its first-quarter earnings. The headline numbers initially looked solid: Its adjusted revenue rose 59% annually to $489 million, clearing estimates by $9 million. Its non-GAAP EPS rose 83% to $0.11, also beating expectations by three cents.

But Square's guidance spooked the bulls. For the second quarter it expects its adjusted revenue to rise 42%-44%, compared to expectations for 44% growth. It expects its adjusted EPS to come in between $0.14 and $0.16, which would represent 8%-23% growth. Analysts had expected $0.18 per share.

A stressed-out trader looks at his trading screen.
A stressed-out trader looks at his trading screen.

Image source: Getty Images.

However, investors should realize that Square usually "sandbags" its guidance with conservative numbers, which lowers expectations and enables it to easily beat estimates next time.

How Square sandbags its guidance

Square's habit of sandbagging its guidance is easy to track. Here's how Square's guidance compared to its actual earnings over the past year:

Adjusted EPS

Q1 2018

Q2 2018

Q3 2018

Q4 2018

Q1 2019

Guidance

$0.03-$0.05

$0.09-$0.11

$0.08-$0.10

$0.12-$0.13

$0.06-$0.08

Actual

$0.06

$0.13

$0.13

$0.14

$0.11

Source: Square quarterly reports.

If Square really expected a significant slowdown, it would have reduced its full-year guidance. However, Square actually reiterated its full-year adjusted EPS forecast of $0.74-$0.78, while raising its full-year adjusted revenue guidance from $2.22-$2.25 billion to $2.22-$2.28 billion -- which suggests that its "soft" second-quarter guidance is all smoke and mirrors.

Keep your eye on the ball

Instead of focusing on Square's guidance game, investors should focus on the company's core growth engines.

Square's GPV (gross payment volume), or the value of all transactions processed on its platform, rose 27% annually to $22.6 billion during the first quarter. 51% of that total now comes from "large" sellers, which generate over $125,000 in annualized GPV, versus 47% a year ago. For comparison, Square's larger rival PayPal (NASDAQ: PYPL) posted 22% year-over-year growth in its payment volume last quarter.

Square's subscription and services revenue rose 126% annually to $219 million, or 23% of its net revenue, marking the segment's fourth straight quarter of triple-digit growth:

Metric

Q1 2018

Q2 2018

Q3 2018

Q4 2018

Q1 2019

Subscription & services revenue

$97 million

$134 million

$166 million

$194 million

$219 million

YOY growth

98%

127%

155%

144%

126%

Percentage of net revenue

14%

16%

19%

21%

23%

YOY = Year-over-year. Source: Square quarterly reports.