"Some experts mutter dark warnings about the Spamularity: the global Chaos
that will ensue once the first distributed spamming engine achieves
human-equivalent sentience."—Rule 34 by Charles Stross
that will ensue once the first distributed spamming engine achieves
human-equivalent sentience."—Rule 34 by Charles Stross
Content acceleration has always been important to AKAM, but for years it has been adding other services to its repertoire. Content acceleration is a volume-driven, price sensitive business, with a record of constant declining y/y prices, much like mass-market semiconductors. Akamai's new services, notably Internet security, are also competitive, but have offered much better profit margins that should hold up at least in the near term.
So why is AKAM priced today around $34.71, well off its 52 week high of $42.52 on January 1, if well above its 52 week low of $24.90 on June 5, 2012? In the past AKAM was a playground for momentum players; it was a relatively small company, and you might see PE ratios swing wildly between say 20 and 60. Lately the stock is behaving more like IBM, more stable, with a much smaller but still impressive market cap of $6.2 billion. At the price quoted above the PE is 31.1 trailing, which is higher than most tech stocks at the moment, but easily justified by a history of growth and the outlook for 2013.
For the latest reported quarter, Q4 2012 ending December 31, Revenue was $377.9 million, up 9% sequentially from $345.3 million and up 17% from $323.7 million in the year-earlier quarter. GAAP net income was $68.3 million, up 42% sequentially from $48.2 million and up 14% from $60.1 million year-earlier.
Akamai just re-issued guidance for Q1, which this late in the quarter should be pretty reliable. Revenue is expected between $352 and $362 million. On a sequential basis that may seem disappointing, but keep in mind that Akamai gets a yearly Q4 bump from the increase in e-commerce in the quarter. Compared to year-earlier revenue of $319.4 million, we get an annual growth rate of 10% at the low end and 13% at the high end.
The dynamics of the business appear to be favoring Akamai. Cloud infrastructure revenue, rather than content acceleration, was 60% of total revenue in Q4. The security component of that was up 5x from the previous year. A major rival, AT&T, has thrown in the towel and is becoming a reseller of Akamai services, which should add substantially to revenue in the second half.
Even the underlying trend for the content acceleration business shows no sign of ebbing. Akamai was founded in 1998. It is just 15 years old. Humans in that age bracket are in an always-connected culture dominated by video and cloud services that often require data packets to be sent from a vast assortment of geographically diverse server farms. The amount of data being served will continue to increase, and Akamai essentially runs a private toll road system within the Internet for those who want the fast service that is essential to capturing customers and converting views to sales.
I like Akamai at this price. I expect it will blow through its current 52-week high some time this year as revenue and profits from the relatively new cloud security business and other new value-added cloud services ramp.
Disclaimer: I am long Akamai. I will not trade the stock for 1 week following this post.
See also: Akamai Investor Relations
My main AKAMAI analyst conferences page.
My conference notes for the Akamai Q4 2012 analyst conference