Upstart: Can This Fallen Fintech Angel Bounce Back After 90% Drop?

 | Jul 14, 2022 11:35AM ET

  • UPST stock has taken an epic round-trip from $29 to $400 to a current $25
  • Recession fears an issue, but biggest problem is the sudden end to company’s growth
  • In 2021, investors believed Upstart was disrupting the industry. UPST won’t rally until investors regain that confidence
  • In the past two years, a good number of stocks have soared and crashed. Few have executed a more spectacular round-trip than consumer lending platform Upstart Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:UPST).

    Upstart went public in December 2020 at an initial offering price of $20. UPST stock closed its first trading day at $29.47. Ten months later, the stock set an all-time intraday high just above $400. Nine months from that point, UPST is back at $25. All told, in less than two years, shares gained 1,900%—and then declined almost 94%.

    Obviously, the volatility in the broader market is a factor. So are fears of a recession that may lead to higher losses on loans generated by Upstart.

    The biggest factor, however, seems relatively simple: investors believed Upstart was unique for a time. But they no longer do. For UPST stock to find a bottom, let alone a rebound, it will have to regain that confidence from investors.

    h2 The Business Turns/h2

    When Upstart went public, the company positioned itself as a truly innovative company. In the company’s prospectus, chief executive officer Dave Girouard wrote that “lending is broken” and that “artificial intelligence is the fix.”

    Clearly, the market bought that story. Upstart’s financial results seemed to support Girouard’s claim. In 2021, Upstart’s revenue increased a whopping 264% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) jumped more than 600%; adjusted EBITDA margins were a healthy 27%.

    But as interest rates and economic fears rose, Upstart’s growth stalled. After first-quarter earnings, guidance suggested a year-over-year revenue decline for the last three quarters of the year, with EBITDA margins guided to just 15%.

    That guidance led UPST stock to plunge 56% in a single day. Incredibly, the news has become worse. Last week, Upstart pre-announced disappointing numbers for the second quarter, well behind original guidance. Upstart expects a rather large net loss in the quarter.

    h2 A Different Product Or Different Packaging?/h2
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    The sudden end to growth raises an important question. Again, Upstart positioned itself as an innovative, even transformative company, one whose data analysis could even replace the ubiquitous credit score.

    It doesn’t look that way anymore. Rather, Upstart looks like the lending businesses that pop up during every period of low-interest rates, when banks and other institutional investors are stretching for yield. Just like banks were happy to buy almost any mortgage during the housing bubble of the 2000s, Upstart had no problem packaging and selling the loans it made in 2021 and the early part of this year.

    That ended in a hurry. By the first quarter, Upstart was keeping loans on its balance sheet. But the company didn’t have enough dry powder: one of the reasons cited for the disappointing Q2 results was that it had to sell loans at a loss; the quick spike in interest rates meant buyers would pay a far lower price for already-issued loans.

    On top of that, Upstart now projects its loans will perform far worse than it had previously believed: