Will News Corp's MySpace start slashing jobs?

Bambi Francisco Roizen · March 17, 2009 · Short URL: https://vator.tv/n/76e

Greenfield: The party ends as Google won't overpay for social searching

 MySpace has 15 months left until its partnership with Google ends, and it doesn't look like Google will re-up for the business and pay MySpace substantial search fees.

To this end, MySpace, which is part of News Corp's Fox Interactive Media, will have some serious cost-cutting decisions to make, according to Pali Research analyst Richard Greenfield.

"Fox Interactive Media's problem is that it significantly ramped its cost structure expecting continued growth," wrote Greenfield. "In fiscal Q2 (Dec) 2009, FIM revenues fell only $7 mm, yet profitability dropped $40 mm or 85%.  While there was a unique IGN issue in the quarter, the need for substantial cost structure reductions is clear."  

It's not so much that social networks are poor environments to display ads, as much as Google's search algorithms weren't as good as they could have been, Greenfield argued. For instance, "Myspace users that search for a person named Dan, should not see DNA testing as the sponsored link," he pointed out.

Essentially, Google "simply does not care about social search," making it "harder to conceive Google paying anywhere near their prior commitments to MySpace, especially as the inherent functionality of social networks (status updates/news feeds, internal IM, internal e-mail) is diminishing the importance of search."

More from his note:

In fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2010 (see Exhibit A), we estimate Myspace will generate $300 million of revenues from its Google search deal in each year, representing about 35% of FIM’s total revenues in each year (with Myspace still by far the largest component of FIM).  While Yahoo, AOL and MSN could all be bidders for a new Myspace deal beginning in July 2010, we suspect all have learned from GOOG’s overpayment.  In turn, we are estimating a 50% drop in search fees. 

In July 2005, News Corp. formed Fox Interactive Media (FIM), with its acquisition of Myspace.  FIM (helped by acquisitions of IGN and Photobucket) along with Fox Sports.com grew to $856 mm of revenues in fiscal (June) 2008.  Yet, after a strong fiscal Q1 (Sept) 2009, FIM experienced its first-ever down revenue quarter in fiscal Q2 (Dec) 2009. 

While Myspace’s strategy to capture portal advertising dollars through its homepage redesign and its recent music relaunch have proved successful, FIM’s problem is that it significantly ramped its cost structure expecting continued growth.  In fiscal Q2 (Dec) 2009, FIM revenues fell only $7 mm, yet profitability dropped $40 mm or 85%.  While there was a unique IGN issue in the quarter, the need for substantial cost structure reductions is clear. 

Assuming a new search deal in FY ‘11 at 50% of the current rate, FIM would need to organically grow revenues by 27%-plus in fiscal (June) 2011 to compensate for the reduced search revenues. We are assuming organic revenues are up double digits and they can take some cost out of the business over the coming year, but not enough to fully-compensate.  In turn, we now expect FIM profitability to drop notably in fiscal 2011. 

(Image source:static.guim.co.uk)

 

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Bambi Francisco Roizen

Founder and CEO of Vator, a media and research firm for entrepreneurs and investors; Managing Director of Vator Health Fund; Co-Founder of Invent Health; Author and award-winning journalist.

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