Shares in Peloton, Inc fell by a third on Friday, wiping $9 billion off the at-home connected fitness company’s market value, as exercisers flocked back to gyms as lockdown restrictions were lifted in key markets.
The New York City-based company was one of the big winners during the early months of the coronavirus pandemic, seeing its sales soar as restrictions in countries including the US and the UK caused gyms to close, leading to a boom in at-home fitness equipment.
Peloton, which has announced an immediate freeze on recruitment, has now slashed its full-year sales forecast from $5.4 billion to between $4.4 and $4.8 billion.
CNBC reports that in a conference call, CEO John Foley said: “It is clear that we underestimated the reopening impact on our company and the overall industry.”
He added: “From forecasting consumer demands to accurately predicting logistics costs, our teams have never seen a more complex operating environment in which to guide our expected results this year.”
The company also slashed the price of its entry-level Peloton bike by 20 per cent this year, squeezing margins and also cannibalising potential sales of its premium Peloton+ model.
The business, which besides generating revenue from actual products also derives income from subscriptions to its classes, also said that sign-up to those are lower than expected, as are sales through its physical stores.
It is now looking to slash costs across the business, with CFO Jill Woodworth saying: “Some of these identified areas of savings include making significant adjustments to our hiring plans across the company, optimising marketing spend and limiting showroom development.”
In an analyst note to clients, investment bank Credit Suisse said: “Demand is coming in lower on all fronts leading us to wonder when we might see a return on all the capital they have deployed.
“Long term, the connected fitness opportunity could still be intact but the path to get there appears more difficult,” it added.
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It seems like peloton went big on the lifestyle aspect of their product, expensive showrooms, adverts, endorsments etc, and needed the bubble not to burst so early while that was still being built.
A friend of mine bought one pre lockdown and has since sold it on as the format was a bit fixed once you've done a couple of months of classes.
I know I said I wasn't comparing Peloton vs Zwift but their Crunchbase profiles are interesting.
Peloton have 1.9Bn of funding, and 6m users at 12.99 month (max - there are lower tiers)
Zwift have 700m of funding at 3m users at 12.99 per month (fairly flat).
Back of fag packet 3 year ROI
Zwift ~1.2bn/700m = 170%
Peloton ~2.3Bn / 1.9bn = 120%
Wildly inaccurate as users <> subscribers and assumes the Peloton bikes are being sold at or more than cost, but does suggest Zwift is a better bet.
Peleton will not exist in 2 years. Good riddance and file under the WeWork Hall of Fame for Tw@atty Overpriced Nonsense.
The adverts make me laugh. The lady boogying on the bike and smiling doesn't show the true effort required, when I've finished a session on the turbo I am a dripping, gibbering mess, and struggle to get off the bike. I wish it was as glamorous as they portray.
How are you to know what kind of workout she's in the midst of? Bet you're proud when you drop somebody who may just be out on a z1/2 spin!
You are missing the point completely.
Which is? People must be giving it everything to even get on an indoor trainer? Because that's how you're coming across.
The bit I don't get is how they aren't making money. Everyone else in the smart bike game sells a fraction of what they do and whilst they also do other stuff I bet they'd love to have Pelotons volume.
Spending about a trazillion quid on advertising probably doesn't help.
Zwift hasn't made any money yet either, it's all about ploughing VC money into mostly adverstising for these companies for the first few years.If they survive that, then they get to the money making stage eventually, not sure Peloton will get there though.
Trouble is neither of the Peloton bikes are very Zwift compatible so a tie up would piss off existing users.
I wasn't thinking of Zwift. They are 99% pure software, wear-as Peloton are mostly hardware with a smidge of video streaming app thrown in. Peloton has 6m members to Zwift's 3m. Peloton basically build an exercise bike with a cheap android tablet bolted on. If they cant make money out of 6m ppl they have screwed up somewhere.
Perhaps they could do a cross-sector rolup of covid-19-hype and rebrand as ZwiftPelotonClubhouse?