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Sunday, 09/05/2021 11:57:18 PM

Sunday, September 05, 2021 11:57:18 PM

Post# of 139
>>> Is C3.ai Stock a Buy?


The AI stock has given up nearly all of its post-IPO gains.


Motley Fool

by Leo Sun

Sep 4, 2021


https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/09/04/is-c3ai-stock-a-buy/?source=eptyholnk0000202&utm_source=yahoo-host&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=article


Key Points

C3’s stock plunged after the company released its first-quarter earnings report.

Its revenue growth is accelerating again, but bottom-line losses are widening.

C3’s stock still looks expensive, and there are much better alternatives for both growth and value-oriented investors.


C3.ai's (NYSE:AI) stock tumbled 10% on Sept. 2 after the artificial intelligence software provider posted its first-quarter earnings. Its revenue rose 29% year-over-year to $52.4 million, beating estimates by $1.1 million. It posted a net loss of $37.5 million -- compared to a slim profit of $150,000 a year ago -- but its loss of $0.37 per share still matched Wall Street's expectations.

Should investors buy C3 after its post-earnings plunge? Or is it still overvalued even after plummeting more than 70% from its 52-week high?

What does C3.ai do?

C3 initially gained a lot of attention because its founder and CEO is Thomas Siebel. The seasoned executive previously co-founded Siebel Systems, an enterprise software company that sold to Oracle for $5.85 billion in 2005.

C3 provides AI algorithms that help companies schedule maintenance routines, detect fraud, optimize their inventories, and strengthen their existing CRM (customer relationship management) systems. Its tools can be customized and integrated into a company's existing software platforms, or provided as pre-built cloud-based applications.

Simply put, C3's flexible tools can help large companies streamline their businesses, cut costs, and make better data-driven decisions. It focuses on securing large "lighthouse" customers -- such as 3M, Royal Dutch Shell, and Microsoft -- whose stamp of approval then helps C3 attract many smaller companies.

When a hot IPO goes cold

C3 went public at $42 per share last December, opened at $100 on the first day, and skyrocketed to the low $180s later that month. But then the stock tumbled all the way back to the high $40s.

C3's revenue rose 88% in 2018, 48% in 2019, and 71% in fiscal 2020. Those impressive growth rates drew a stampede of bulls to its IPO. However, C3's revenue rose just 17% in fiscal 2021. It blamed that abrupt slowdown on the pandemic, which disrupted the energy and industrial markets, which accounted for most of its revenue.

C3 increased its customer count by 82% to 89 in 2021, but its average contract value fell from $12.1 million to $7.2 million. It grew its customer count by 85% year-over-year to 98 in the first quarter, and its average contract value dropped to $4.5 million.

During last quarter's conference call, Siebel claimed C3's declining contract values would stabilize the "lumpiness" in its business model by reducing its dependence on large customers. That statement was unusual since most cloud software companies prefer to gain larger customers with higher contract values. However, C3's adjusted RPO (remaining performance obligations) still rose 28% year-over-year in the second quarter, indicating that its current contracts will generate stable near-term growth.

C3 expects its revenue to rise 33%-35% for the full year. It expects its growth to accelerate as the pandemic-related headwinds wane and it upgrades its AI suite, launches new enterprise applications, and reaches more customers via its new partnership with Alphabet's (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google Cloud -- in which Google will co-sell C3's AI applications alongside its other cloud services.

High valuations and widening losses

C3's revenue growth looks decent, but the stock still trades at 20 times this year's sales -- even though it's hovering just slightly above its IPO price.

That price-to-sales ratio might initially seem reasonable compared to those of similar companies like Palantir (NYSE:PLTR), its AI and data mining peer, which trades at 34 times this year's sales. However, Palantir's revenue rose 47% last year thanks to the resilience of its government customers during the pandemic, and it anticipates at least 30% annual revenue growth from 2021 through 2025.

Salesforce (NYSE:CRM), which also helps companies optimize their operations with AI-powered cloud services, trades at ten times this year's sales. It expects its revenue to rise 23%-24% this year, and more than double to over $50 billion by fiscal 2026. Salesforce is also firmly profitable, while C3 and Palantir are not. Some of Salesforce's customers notably use C3's tools to enhance its core CRM platform.

C3 expects its operating loss to widen from $60.3 million in fiscal 2021 to $107-$119 million in fiscal 2022 as it ramps up its investments. During the conference call, CFO Dave Barter said the company would continue to "invest thoughtfully in headcount in programs to accelerate our revenue growth."

Is C3's stock worth buying?

C3 will likely keep growing as more companies seek out new ways to optimize their businesses with AI services. However, its stock is still expensive, its losses are widening, and there are plenty of more appealing AI-related alternatives with stronger sales growth or lower valuations.

I didn't like C3 when it was hovering near its all-time highs last December, and I still don't like it now. Investors should avoid it until it stabilizes its contract values, narrows its losses, and demonstrates that its partnerships with companies like Google will actually bring in new customers.


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