Match shares plunge more than 20% after online dating company misses on revenue and forecast

Match shares plunge more than 20% after online dating company misses on revenue and forecast


The Covid-19 pandemic resulted in an increase in people looking for love on dating platforms such as Match Group’s Tinder app.

Beata Zawrzel | NurPhoto | Getty Images

Match Group shares tumbled 22% in extended trading on Tuesday after the dating site reported second-quarter revenue that missed analyst expectations and issued weaker-than-expected guidance.

Here’s how the company did.

  • Revenue: $795 million vs. estimate of $804 million, according to Refinitiv
  • Earnings: 52 cents per share

Match, whose properties include Tinder, OkCupid and Hinge, said revenue grew 12% from a year earlier.

In addition to trailing estimates for the second quarter, Match also gave a forecast for the third quarter of $790 to $800 million, which would result in no growth for the period and is well below analysts’ estimates. The company said its forecast includes a hit from foreign exchange rates.

Match said it saw weakness in its live streaming business and in Japan, which “has yet to show meaningful recovery following the lifting of Covid restrictions,” according to the shareholder letter.

The company also said that in the second half of 2021, its business benefited from the availability of Covid-19 vaccines and increased social activity.

“We are not seeing a similar surge of activity in 2022,” the company said.

The number of paid users increased 10% to 16.4 million, and revenue per payer rose 3% to $15.86.

Revenue at Tinder grew 13%. A litigation settlement related to Tinder led to a $441 million payment and negative free cash flow of $7 million.

Match’s stock price is down 42% of its value year to date, prior to the after-hours slump.

WATCH: Time to swipe right on dating app stocks?



Source

Google offers ‘voluntary’ buyouts to hardware and platform teams
Technology

Google offers ‘voluntary’ buyouts to hardware and platform teams

Google’s Senior Vice President Hardware, Rick Osterloh, speaks during a launch event in San Francisco, October 4, 2017. Stephen Lam | Reuters Google is offering buyouts to employees in its “Platforms and Devices” unit ahead of expected cuts. That unit includes more than 25,000 full-time employees who work on Android, Chrome, ChromeOS, Google Photos, Google […]

Read More
Atlassian pops 20% on better-than-expected earnings, revenue outlook
Technology

Atlassian pops 20% on better-than-expected earnings, revenue outlook

Mike Cannon-Brookes, co-founder of Atlassian Corp., in Sydney, Australia, on Dec. 6, 2023. Mike Cannon-Brookes co-founded software giant Atlassian.  Lisa Maree Williams | Bloomberg | Getty Images Atlassian shares popped 20% in premarket trading after blowing past Wall Street’s fiscal second-quarter earnings and guidance expectations. Adjusted earnings came in at 96 cents per share, ahead […]

Read More
TikTok’s traffic bounces back despite being pulled off app stores, fears of shutdown
Technology

TikTok’s traffic bounces back despite being pulled off app stores, fears of shutdown

A 3D-printed miniature model of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and TikTok logo are seen in this illustration taken January 19, 2025. Dado Ruvic | Reuters TikTok has nearly bounced back to its original traffic levels after usage fell 85% when the app temporarily shut down earlier this month, according to Cloudflare Radar. “DNS traffic for […]

Read More