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That recent rally in the value of the U.S. dollar (that blip higher at the tail end of the chart above) may indicate that tech growth rates may be slowing. To wit:
Of those aforementioned examples, the impact of the weak dollar on Internet companies could be the most notable. After all, Google earned half of its revenue for the trailing 12 months from overseas, Amazon had 47 percent and eBay had 53 percent, according to Lindsay. If the dollar continues to strengthen you're going to hear a lot more about currency rates on those conference calls. The second quarter questions focused mostly on the U.S. economy.
Meanwhile, analysts have focused on currency impacts for old-line technology companies like HP and IBM, but have largely skated past questions for Internet companies. It's possible that Google's third quarter conference call may sound more like HP's with all the hypothetical questions about currency what-ifs.
Here's a look at the currency gravy train for Internet companies:
Lindsay wrote:
A strengthening dollar is problematic for Google, Amazon and eBay – all three of which receive roughly half of their revenues from overseas – but surprisingly the player with the biggest value exposure is Yahoo! EBay earned 53% of its trailing twelve months of revenue outside the U.S., while Google earned 50%, Amazon 47%. Yahoo! by comparison earned just 30% of its revenues overseas over the same period, and might be expected to have lower currency exposure overall, but this is not the case. The value of Yahoo!'s two large minority investments, Yahoo! Japan and Alibaba, are denominated in Yen and Renminbi respectively - a strengthening dollar diminishes both of their contributions to Yahoo!'s dollar-denominated value per share.Lindsay in his report focused on three possibilities for Internet companies. A base case where the dollar remains flat relative to other currencies through the end of 2009. A pessimistic scenario where the dollar appreciates against other currencies by 10 percent through 2009. And an optimistic scenario where the dollar slides 5 percent through the end of the year. Note the pessimistic scenario for Google and the Internet gang may be good for you personally. The stronger dollar means lower oil prices. Here's the summary of the potential impact on Internet company earnings:
Lindsay notes that the currency impacts on companies are asymmetric--a falling dollar boosts results, but a rising one will deliver a bigger blow to margins. This issue goes well beyond the companies mentioned here. The upcoming quarter may make us all familiar with currency fluctuations.
posted by Larry Dignan
August 26, 2008 @ 2:01 am
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