Key Takeaways:
- Hello Group’s revenue fell 3.2% in the fourth quarter, with an even larger decline forecast in the current quarter, dragged down by plunging business for its Tantan unit
- Company said it finished installing a new management team at Tantan by the end of last year, following the ousting of the unit’s CEO and COO a year ago
By Doug Young
“2021 was a busy year for us,” CEO Wang Li said in a brief statement accompanying the results. “Despite a variety of external challenges, our team was able to methodically execute our strategic priorities and delivered solid results.”
The coming year looks like it will be filled with more “busy-ness,” as Hello Group seeks to “improve its user experience,” which will not only improve its reputation as more than just a hook-up app, but also hopefully reverse the decline in paying users. From our perspective, one of the most interesting questions is whether 2022 could be the year that Hello says “goodbye” to its struggling Tantan app.
Hello Group was riding high as China’s leading dating app when it acquired Tantan for $760 million in 2018. At that time, Tantan was also a rising up-and-comer on the scene, and Hello held out big hopes that the new app would eventually become an equal or even greater contributor alongside its original Momo app. But that roadmap didn’t go quite according to plan, and things finally came to a head about a year ago with the ousting of Tantan’s CEO and COO.
While Tantan only accounts for about 12% of Hello Group’s total, the huge drop in its revenue was a major factor behind the company’s overall 3.2% year-on-year revenue decline in the fourth quarter to 3.7 billion yuan.
Wang Li took over as Tantan’s CEO on an interim basis after last year’s management shakeup, and he noted on the company’s latest earnings call that “We were pleased to see that the entire management and execution team was in place (at Tantan) by the end of the year.” So, clearly the company isn’t saying openly that it could potentially jettison Tantan – at least not yet.
Rising sentiment
Of the 11 polled by Yahoo Finance in March, five rated the company a “strong buy,” another 10 rated it a “buy” and just one rated it a “hold.” That’s a huge improvement from February, when 12 analysts rated it a “hold,” and just eight rated it a “buy” or “strong buy.” They also set an average target price of $15.12, which is roughly double its current level.
At least part of the shift could owe to growing signals that the threat of forced delistings is receding as the U.S. securities regulator moves closer to a key information-sharing deal with its Chinese counterpart. But at least part of the optimism also looks tied to belief that Hello Group’s troubles may already be bottoming out and better times may lie ahead.
We’ll close with a look at Hello Group’s original Momo business, and also its young overseas operations that include services in the Middle East and Indonesia. While the company’s overall revenue was down, revenue from Momo actually grew 6% during the latest quarter and now accounts for 83% of Hello Group’s total.
The company said it expects overall revenue to fall by 7.8% to 10.7% in the first quarter – far worse than the fourth-quarter decline – indicating not only that Tantan’s revenue will continue to drop but that Momo may also fall too. But analysts are predicting the trend should bottom out later this year, forecasting an 8% rise in 2022 revenue compared to 2021’s level.
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