Why Tucows Inc. Is Plunging Today

Tucows Inc. (TSX:TC)(NASDAQ:TCX) is down over 8%, despite releasing record earnings results this morning. Should you buy on the dip?

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Tucows Inc. (TSX:TC)(NASDAQ:TCX), the world’s second-largest domain name registrar and one of North America’s leading providers of mobile phone and internet services, released record fourth-quarter and full-year earnings results this morning, but its stock has responded by plunging over 8% to open the day’s trading session.

The stock now sits more than 25% below its 52-week high of US$71.75 reached back in December, so let’s break down the fourth-quarter results, full-year results, and the fundamentals of its stock to determine if we should use this weakness as a long-term buying opportunity.

The record financial performance

Here’s a quick breakdown of eight of the most notable financial statistics from Tucow’s three-month period ended December 31, 2017, compared with the same period in 2016:

Metric Q4 2017 Q4 2016 Change
Network Access Services revenues US$25.15 million $18.76 million 34.1%
Domain Services revenues US$65.47 million US$30.05 million 117.9%
Total revenue US$90.62 million US$48.81 million 85.7%
Gross margin US$25.74 million US$16.42 million 56.7%
Adjusted EBITDA US$15.28 million US$7.33 million 108.3%
Net income US$11.20 million US$2.82 million 297.6%
Basic net earnings per common share (EPS) US$1.06 US$0.27 292.6%
Net cash provided by operating activities US$14.08 million US$9.07 million 55.3%

And here’s a breakdown of six notable financial statistics from Tucow’s 12-month period ended December 31, 2017, compared with the same period in 2016:

Metric Fiscal 2017 Fiscal 2016 Change
Total revenue US$329.42 million US$189.82 million 73.5%
Gross margin US$84.52 million US$63.05 million 34.0%
Adjusted EBITDA US$41.36 million US$30.13 million 37.3%
Net income US$22.33 million US$16.07 million 39.0%
Basic net earnings per common share US$2.12 US$1.53 38.6%
Net cash provided by operating activities US$31.90 million US$22.51 million 41.7%

Stock-buyback program announced

In a separate press release, Tucows announced that its board of directors has approved a US$40 million stock-buyback program, and it will begin today and end on or before February 13, 2019.

Should you use the sell-off as a buying opportunity?

It was a phenomenal quarter overall for Tucows, highlighted by growth across all of its key financial metrics, and it capped off an incredibly strong year for the company, so I think the market should have responded by sending its stock significantly higher; that being said, I think the weakness represents a very attractive entry point for long-term investors, because the stock is now wildly undervalued based on its growth, as it trades at less than 25 times fiscal 2017’s EPS of US$2.12 and less than 17 times the consensus analyst estimate of US$3.19 for fiscal 2018.

Tucow’s stock has taken a beating since a short seller targeted it in January, but I simply cannot ignore the incredible growth the company is experiencing right now, so I would use the recent weakness as a long-term buying opportunity.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Joseph Solitro has no position in any stocks mentioned. Tom Gardner owns shares of Tucows. The Motley Fool owns shares of Tucows. Tucows is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

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