With Stock Tanking, Box Founder Responds to Complaints Box's stock price is the victim of confused analysts, Aaron Levie says.

By Everett Rosenfeld

This story originally appeared on CNBC

Box.com

Box's stock price is the victim of confused analysts, CEO Aaron Levie said.

He said Thursday on CNBC's "Closing Bell" that he did not want to overemphasize results' relation to Wall Street expectations, but he did want to set the record straight about his company.
"On every metric in the last quarter—on revenue, on operating income, on billings—we beat the estimates from analysts," Levie said. "So we think we had a great quarter."

Shares in the cloud storage company tanked Thursday—down about 15 percent just before Levie spoke with CNBC, but paring those declines by the market close—after it reported fiscal fourth-quarter results after the bell Wednesday.

Box posted a loss of $1.65 per share, which initially appeared to be a major miss because some consensus estimates called for a loss of about $1.17 per share.

Levie told CNBC Wednesday night, however, that that consensus figure was wrong because some analysts had based their expectations on an incorrect share count. In fact, he said, the actual consensus was for a loss of $1.99—meaning Box topped what Wall Street projected.

Responding to one analyst's complaint that he was being too defensive for a company CEO who just had his first earnings release since going public, Levie said he wanted to make sure Box sets "appropriate expectations."

Still, he said "for the most part, we're just focused on execution."

Box's quarterly revenue easily topped Street projections, rising to $63 million, compared with estimates for $58 million.
The company forecast revenue growth of about 30 percent in the current fiscal year, which would mark a slowdown.

As for another analyst's complaint that Box spends too much on advertising, Levie said that ad spending has fallen as a percentage of revenue, but "our job right now is to go capture as much adoption as possible."

—CNBC's Josh Lipton and Karma Allen contributed to this report.

Everett Rosenfeld is a staff writer at CNBC.

 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Productivity

You Can't Beat Procrastination With Time Management or Productivity Hacks. Here's What Actually Works.

Procrastination isn't about time — it's about emotion. Here's how to work with your brain to navigate emotions and overcome procrastination.

Business News

This ChatGPT Agent Predicted a Viral Trend in 15 Minutes — Then My Content Took Off

Most creators are still guessing what to post. I used ChatGPT's new Agent to predict what would go viral — and it took off in just 48 hours.

Starting a Business

Is This Where Future Business Owners Will Start Their Education?

Instead of an expensive college education, new entrepreneurs can get their education online right here

Business News

OpenAI Is Creating a LinkedIn Competitor to Help You Find a Job

OpenAI's soon-to-be-released Jobs Platform matches candidates to companies using AI.