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Twilio Falls 4% In After-Hours On Weakening Corporate Demand

Shares of Twilio fell 4.3% in extended trading on Tuesday despite reporting stronger-than-expected 2Q earnings results. The communication tool provider’s slowing customer expansion growth rate weighed on the stock.

Twilio (TWLO) said its dollar-based net expansion rate was 132% in 2Q, lower than the 143% reported in 1Q, and 141% in the year-ago quarter. According to Bloomberg, the slowing customer expansion growth rate represents a weakening corporate demand for communication tools.

Meanwhile, the company reported adjusted EPS of $0.09 in 2Q beating analysts’ expectations of a loss of $0.09. Revenues jumped 46% to $400.8 million and surpassed Street estimates of $368.2 million.

Rosenblatt Securities analyst Ryan Koontz increased TWLO’s price target to $255 (10% downside potential) from $235 and maintained a Hold rating. Koontz said, “our long-term positive outlook for the CPaaS [Communications Platform as a Service] segment remains bullish and we expect TWLO to benefit from minimal competition in the near-term. We increase our 2H20 and FY21 revenue estimates (by +3%) with earnings slightly lower due to gross margin adjustments.”

Currently, TWLO has a Strong Buy analyst consensus. The stock has surged nearly 189% year-to-date, so it is not surprising that the average price target of $242.37 implies downside potential of about 15%. (See TWLO stock analysis on TipRanks).

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Amit Singh
Amit Singh jumped into the world of stock analysis and investing after completing his Post Graduate Diploma in Finance in 2009. Before joining TipRanks in 2020, he worked as an equity research analyst for eight years. With a keen eye for identifying strategic investment opportunities, his work entails evaluating stocks, building financial models, writing company-specific research reports, and identifying the overall financial worth of companies in the consumer staples and technology sectors. In 2017, Amit found a way to combine his expertise in evaluating companies with his passion for writing. He has also worked with the financial research firm Market Realist.

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