BREAKING
Plains All American weakens as NGL divestiture and cost cuts frame muted 2026 growth 1 hour ago Plains All American Streamlines, Targets Crude Growth Amid NGL Exit 1 hour ago Operational Efficiency Powers MGY to Historic Production and Dividend Lift 2 hours ago Johnson Outdoors Hooks 31% Revenue Gain, Operating Loss Narrows 2 hours ago Innovation and E-Commerce at the Core of Johnson Outdoors’ 2026 Roadmap 2 hours ago Encompass Health Corporation reports Q4 2025 results, issues 2026 guidance 3 days ago Graham Corporation Expands Capabilities Across Defense, Energy, and Space Markets 3 days ago Graham Corporation Sees Robust Q3 on Defense Momentum and FlackTek Integration 3 days ago Biogen’s Q4 FY25 adj. earnings decline, but beat estimates; revenue down 7% 3 days ago Infographic: How Philip Morris (PM) performed in Q4 2025 financial results 3 days ago Plains All American weakens as NGL divestiture and cost cuts frame muted 2026 growth 1 hour ago Plains All American Streamlines, Targets Crude Growth Amid NGL Exit 1 hour ago Operational Efficiency Powers MGY to Historic Production and Dividend Lift 2 hours ago Johnson Outdoors Hooks 31% Revenue Gain, Operating Loss Narrows 2 hours ago Innovation and E-Commerce at the Core of Johnson Outdoors’ 2026 Roadmap 2 hours ago Encompass Health Corporation reports Q4 2025 results, issues 2026 guidance 3 days ago Graham Corporation Expands Capabilities Across Defense, Energy, and Space Markets 3 days ago Graham Corporation Sees Robust Q3 on Defense Momentum and FlackTek Integration 3 days ago Biogen’s Q4 FY25 adj. earnings decline, but beat estimates; revenue down 7% 3 days ago Infographic: How Philip Morris (PM) performed in Q4 2025 financial results 3 days ago
ADVERTISEMENT
Market News

Dropbox Q1 earnings, revenue beat Street view; stock gains

Earnings of Dropbox (Nasdaq: DBX) increased and exceeded estimates in the first quarter as solid user growth pushed up revenues. The company’s stock was up 8% during the extended session Thursday, after the stronger than expected results spurred a rally. The file hosting service provider, headquartered in San Francisco, California, reported adjusted earnings of $0.10 […]

May 9, 2019 2 min read

Earnings of Dropbox (Nasdaq: DBX) increased and exceeded estimates in the first quarter as solid user growth pushed up revenues. The company’s stock was up 8% during the extended session Thursday, after the stronger than expected results spurred a rally.Dropbox Q1 earnings, revenue beat Street view

The file hosting service provider, headquartered in San Francisco, California, reported adjusted earnings of $0.10 per share for the quarter, up from last year’s $0.08 per share. On a reported basis, it posted a net loss of $7.7 million or $0.02 per share, compared to a loss of $465.5 million or $2.13 per share in the corresponding period of 2018.

The improvement reflects a 22% growth in first-quarter revenues to $385.6 million. The results came in above Wall Street’s forecast. At 13.2 million, the number of paying users was up 15% from last year. The average revenue per paying user was $121.04, compared to $114.30 in the first quarter of last year.

The company’s stock was up 8% during the extended session Thursday, after the stronger than expected results spurred a rally

Drew Houston, chief executive officer of Dropbox, said, “We’ve reached a scale few SaaS companies have achieved and continue to ship product experiences that put Dropbox at the center of our users’ workflows. We also closed our first acquisition as a public company with HelloSign, and I’m excited about our future together.”

Related: Dropbox Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call Transcript

ADVERTISEMENT

In February, the company acquired JN Projects (HelloSign) for $230 million, which provides an e-signature and document workflow platform. The deal expands Dropbox’s content collaboration capabilities to include additional business-critical workflows.

The fact that Dropbox maintained strong liquidity and kept debt under check, despite making heavy investments in growth initiatives and buyouts, indicates that the management is adopting a balanced approach towards expansion.

Box Inc. (BOX), Dropbox’s main competitor, is all set to publish financial results for its first quarter on May 29 after the closing bell.

In recent quarters, the improvement in bottom-line performance and solid cash flow boosted investor sentiment. Dropbox’s shares, however, maintained a downtrend since they were listed more than a year ago. The stock, which lost about 25% in the past twelve months, gained sharply after Thursday’s earnings report.

ADVERTISEMENT

We’re on Apple News! Follow us to receive the latest stock market, earnings and financial news at your fingertips

ADVERTISEMENT