Posts for Ticker ‘WSPI’

Website Pros Remains Top Developing Web Property

Website Pros (NASDAQ: WSPI) just posted what are actually very strong earnings when you consider the current climate right now.  The hosting, e-commerce, domain registrar (and more) posted earnings of $0.13 non-GAAP EPS on $31.3 million before exclusionary acquisition items and $30.9 million after.  First Call had estimates at $0.11 EPS on $31.26 million in in revenues.

The company put guidance for 2008 non-GAAP EPS at $0.78 to $0.82, above the $0.77 consensus estimate.  It also puts 2008 revenues at $133 to $137 million, while consensus estimates are $134.4 million.

The company’s customer metrics looked better quarter over quarter as well, with its churn rate down to 4% from 4.1% and its total subscribers were 263,000 from 255,000.  It also noted how its acquisition of Web.com will boost non-GAAP EPS during the first half of 2008.

We have featured this one positively for the last two weeks in "UNDER $10 STOCKS" subscriber letter.  Frankly, we do see some areas where the bulls can make their cheers and also where some of the nay-sayers could point to issues.  But all in all, this was a solid quarter and this remains one of our top small cap internet stocks with upside from current levels.

Shares closed up 2.4% at $9.88 today, and shares are up almost 4% at $10.26 in after-hours trading.  Its 52-week trading range is $7.92 to $12.00.  This one is thinly covered and has an average analyst target of roughly $14.00, although our fair value is a bit under those targets.

Jon C. Ogg
February 12, 2008

Website Pros Shows Why Web.com Was Worth The Acquisition (WSPI)

Website Pros (NASDAQ:WSPI) posted quarterly results.  The company posted $17.8 million in revenues, $0.15 EPS non-GAAP, and $0.02 EPS on GAAP basis.  First Call had estimates at $17.77 million revenues and $0.13 non-GAAP EPS.

This was a tough quarter to analyze because of the ongoing integration issues in the recent Web.com (formerly Interland).  We noted this as part of the 24/7 Wall St. "Small Cap Internet Takeover List" with the first of two parts of companies under $1 Billion tied to the web that could be takeover candidates under the proper set of circumstances.

If you want to see how potentially powerful this buyout of Web.com (even if it was two-years too late) can be, look no further: On a stand-alone basis, Website Pros’ total net subscribers were approximately 82,000 at the end of the third quarter, up from approximately 80,700 at the end of the second quarter.  But including the customer adds from Web.com, the combined net subscribers was almost 255,000 at the end of the third quarter. 

Churn was mixed with 5.2% rate, down from 6.2% in Q3 2006 and up from 4.8% in the prior quarter.  With the much larger number of customer since the Web.com, it is the opinion of 24/7 Wall St. that the churn rate will rise.  Even with a higher churn rate the opportunities for the company to grow rapidly just went into overdrive.

Web.com, according to the company, continued revenue and subscriber growth driven by both direct marketing and partnerships.  Interestingly enough, the company said it will continue to identify growth prospects from both inside and outside the combined company.

Jon C. Ogg
November 6, 2007

Jon Ogg produces the 24/7 Wall St. Special Situation Investing Newsletter; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Web.Com Buyout: Right Move, 2-Years Late (WWWW, WSPI)

Stock Tickers: WWWW, WSPI, GOOG, YHOO, EBAY, VRSN, AMZN

Web.com (WWWW-NASDAQ) last night finally made the right move, although they are doing it late and possibly with the wrong partner.  The company has signed an agreement to merge with Website Pros (WSPI-NASDAQ).  This is not at all meant to be negative against Website Pros at all.  More than two years ago I had noticed what was going on in the web hosting, domain registrations, e-commerce, video, blogging and the intro of an ‘ease of advertising’ were all starting to converge in a much faster manner than ever seen.  It was as if the goals of Internet-1999 were suddenly converging into a visible effort that had a lot of growth.

Register.com had either been given an offer or was rumored to be on the blocks, but the basis was the buyout of DoubleClick by Hellman & Friedman for starters.  Register.com was larger and tad a cheaper, but Web.com (then as Interland under the "INLD" ticker) was the obvious land grab.  Here we are two years later and the company is going for what is less money than it was potentially worth then.  As noted this is nothing against Website Pros, and as it hasn’t ever gotten this much coverage in the 20-ish months since its IPO this near-5% drop today is probably a gift for that company.

Web.com/Interland was name that at any time Google (GOOG-NASDAQ) could have acquired to ramp up its Blogspot, Google Checkout, Google Base, and the like.  Yahoo! (YHOO-NASDAQ) could have rolled it into its business services, 360, and more.  eBay (EBAY-NASDAQ) could have rolled it up for hosting, think e-commerce, Skype, automatic-buy and auto-auction links and the like.  VeriSign (VRSN-NASDAQ) could have rolled it up into the Network Solutions unit and even Amazon.com (AMZN-NASDAQ) could have used it for part of its e-commerce gateway and sales platform.  GoDaddy.com or a Register.com could have easily absorbed it, as could have Hellman & Friedman or others.  None of that matters now, and this is so small now that it probably won’t make much on headlines.

This was the sort of BAIT SHOP target we had looked for and the stock was under $2.00 at the time.  These are getting harder and harder to find, although we still have targets that are incrementally valuable such as this.  I had taked to a couple of San Francisco-based hedge funds about taking stakes in June 2006, and their thoughts were both that it was too small to matter.  We have several other smaller companies like this now that would be great incremental add-ons for much larger players, although they are micro-cap web stocks and eitherhave no stock options available for hedging or are too expensive to hedge.  Our buyouts and mergers newsletter 24/7 Wall St. "Special Situation Investing Newsletter" covers these, although these are probably worth revisiting in light of today’s reaction to the merger.   

This new company will have to the tune of 234,000 paid subscribers and more than $117 million in annualized revenues.  Unfortunately, Web.com has been seeing a steady drop-off and the value is not what it was.  This is one that I had removed from the BAIT SHOP last year as it became more expensive than what it looked worth and after it had exceeded the $5.50 mark. 

HERE ARE THE BUYOUT TERMS (unanimously approved by both boards of directors): Web.com shareholders may elect to receive for every Web.com share either 0.6875 shares of Website Pros stock or $6.5233 in cash, subject to proration so that the total cash paid shall equal $25 million. In the aggregate, Website Pros will issue approximately 9 million shares of Website Pros stock and pay $25 million in cash. Based on the closing price of Website Pros’ stock on June 26, 2007, the transaction is valued at an aggregate purchase price of approximately $129 million.

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.