How Much Is Kickstarter Worth?
"From a business perspective we decided from the very beginning that we would we would never IPO, and we would never sell to a bigger company." -- Yancey Strickler
Kickstarter just might be the hottest stock that everyone wants to own -- but can't. Founded by Perry Chen, Yancey Strickler, and Charles Adler in 2009, Kickstarter has grown into the giant of the crowdfunding movement. Over the past six years, it's routed $1.87 billion in financial backing from would-be consumers to would-be entrepreneurs.
Over that time, Kickstarter has funded more than 90,000 projects, enticed 9.2 million people to fund those projects, 2.8 million backers to fund more projects, and turned 37% of its users' projects into actual, tangible products. In the process, Kickstarter has also collected as much as $95 millionin fee revenue to run its business -- with 28% of that revenue collected in 2014 alone.
That's one fast-growing business.
Seeing greenAnd yet, that same year, 2014, now-CEO Yancey Strickler famously promised that he would "never" sell the company he helped to create.
But what if he did? How much would Kickstarter be worth?
At $2 billion in buyout value, Oculus is easily the most valuable project ever to come out of Kickstarter. But is Kickstarter itself worth as much? Source: Oculus.
Redlight, greenlightTrying to figure out Kickstarter's worth today may seem an exercise in over-optimism, but stranger things have happened than a Kickstarter IPO. In 1999, we here at The Motley Fool published our first list of nine companies we wish would IPO (so we could buy them). Most of these companies had steadfastly insisted they had no plans to ever IPO -- but three of them wound up doing just that.
Green with envyIts CEO's best intentions notwithstanding, Kickstarter could end up IPOing, too. So, what might the company be worth if it did?
Calculated from its standing start in 2009, Kickstarter's growth to perhaps $95 million in revenues through 2014 works out to... let's see here... $0 in 2009, divided into $95 million in 2014, and take the fifth root of that, equals... infinite revenue growth per annum.
That's not very helpful. So instead, let's fast forward a few yearsand see how Kickstarter's growth leapt out of the gate:
Data source: Author's own estimations, calculated from data released by Kickstarter.com. Not all pledges are ultimately paid out for successful projects. Unsuccessful pledges would not have generated a 5% fee for Kickstarter.
As you can see, 2010 was the first year Kickstarter saw appreciable pledge activity on its website (just under $28 million). At the 5% fee that Kickstarter levies on pledges, even assuming all pledges resulted in successful funding for projects -- which they don't -- that would work out to, at most, $1.4 million in revenue for the company.
Still, assuming generally steady levels of success on funding efforts, growth from $28 million in pledges in 2010 to $529 million in pledges in 2014 implies a revenue growth rate of roughly 108% annually over that five-year period.
That's pretty impressive. According to data from S&P Capital IQ, it's comparableto the revenue growth rates of Internet stars such as Twitter and Facebook. If we were to apply their price-to-sales ratios to what we estimate is Kickstarter's revenue, therefore, then...
The Twitter hypothesis...at Twitter's 11-times-sales valuation, Kickstarter's $26 million estimated 2014 revenue might imply a valuation of only $286 millionon Kickstarter stock. Or...
The Facebook theory...at Facebook's richer 20-times-sales valuation, Kickstarter stock could be worth perhaps $520 million.
That latter valuation is probably closer to the mark. Kickstarter, like Facebook (but unlike Twitter), is currently a profitable enterprise, and according to Strickler, it has been profitable ever since 2010. As such, it's worth a higher P/S ratio than Twitter gets.
The stock market realityInvestors hoping to get rich off an eventual Kickstarter IPO will probably be disappointed with these numbers. But they "ain't seen nothing yet."
After setting off on a wild ride from 2009 to 2013, Kickstarter is showing decelerating growth in the amount of pledge revenue it raises. In 2013, total monies pledged to Kickstarter projects hit a record $480 million. But in 2014, that record was broken by only 10%, with pledges topping out at "only" $529 million.
Why is this? Part of the reason may be that users are seeing alternative crowdsourcing companies pop up. Part of it may be disenchantment with Kickstarter's business model, where consumers provide all of the financing for a new business, only to see that business sell out to Facebook for a $2 billion payday -- and pay Kickstarter fans precisely bupkis.
Whatever the reason for Kickstarter's slowing growth rate, though, and whatever investors might ultimately decide Kickstarter stock to be worth, I personally won't be buying into the company unless and until we see Kickstarter's growth engine get a kick in the pants of its own.
With a piece of Oculus headgear, a gamer can see virtual reality. But I still can't see a reason to buy Kickstarter stock. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
The article How Much Is Kickstarter Worth? originally appeared on Fool.com.
Fool contributorRich Smithdoes not own shares of, nor is he short, any company named above. You can find him on our virtual stockpicking service,Motley Fool CAPS, publicly pontificating under the handleTMFDitty, where he's currently ranked No. 328 out of more than 75,000 rated members. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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