Latch, Inc.

Report azionario OTCPK:LTCH

Capitalizzazione di mercato: US$29.6m

Latch Performance degli utili passati

Criteri Il passato verificati 0/6

Latch ha registrato una crescita degli utili a un tasso medio annuo di 23.7%, mentre il settore Software ha registrato utili in crescita a un tasso medio annuo di 22.4%. I ricavi sono stati in crescita a un tasso medio annuo di 22.6%.

Informazioni chiave

23.67%

Tasso di crescita degli utili

67.64%

Tasso di crescita dell'EPS

Software Crescita del settore17.33%
Tasso di crescita dei ricavi22.64%
Rendimento del capitale proprio-92.68%
Margine netto-69.15%
Ultimo aggiornamento sugli utili31 Mar 2026

Aggiornamenti sulle prestazioni recenti

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Oct 05

Latch, Inc. Is Worth More Dead Than Alive

Summary The spectacular decline in high-growth stocks have yielded a number of interesting net-net situations, including Latch, Inc. A conservative estimate of Latch's liquidation value is $1.17 a share, or as much as $1.38 in a best-case liquidation scenario. The stock could be worth much more than liquidation value if management gets lucky with controlling costs as sales are extremely strong. The spectacular decline in growth stocks has presented investors with some interesting net-net opportunities, and Latch, Inc. (LTCH) is certainly one of them. Once labelled by Chamath Palihapitiya as the best SaaS company he's ever seen, the stock now sells for less than cash net of all liabilities after falling a spectacular 91.39% over the past 12 months as of the time of writing. The stock represents an interesting opportunity for net-net investors. Made famous by Benjamin Graham in his 1932 Fortune Magazine article, a net-net situation arises when a company's stock sells below liquidation value. Latch along with a handful of other growth companies find themselves in that situation today. A Look at Latch's Q1 Balance Sheet Latch has a high-quality balance sheet (Latch, Inc. 10-Q) The two most important figures here are the cash and cash equivalents plus available for sale securities on one side, and the total liabilities on the other. You can see that the company is worth $262 million based on the cash it has net of all liabilities. With 142 million shares outstanding at the end of the quarter, that would equate to a liquidation value of approximately $1.85, more than double the current price. The Wrinkle in Latch's Balance Sheet Almost half of total liabilities are comprised of deferred revenue. That would have been good news if the company is profitable. In Latch's case, however, it means the company will spend even more to realize that revenue. Obviously, some of what it will spend will be deducted from inventories and prepaid expenses and wouldn't affect the liquidation value. However, for the sake of conservatism, let's assume the company will expense these costs out of the cash it has on hand. Looking at the income statement of Q2, the company lost $50.6 million on $13.7 million in revenue. Of that, $36.4 million were cash expenses. Applying the same margin to deferred revenue of $35.7 million, the increase in total liabilities would be $94.9 million. This lowers the liquidation value to $167.1 million, or $1.17 a share. As I've mentioned there is upside to that number based on how much of the expenses come out from other assets like inventory and prepaid expenses, in addition to any potential improvement from management's cost-cutting initiatives. There is also an upside from collecting receivables. The company has accounts receivable of $29 million, with an additional $2.8 million in doubtful accounts. The quarterly showed that the company recovered $350k during the quarter, so there is potential to recover more in future quarters. But focusing solely on the $29 million in account receivables, the sum would represent a significant boost to the liquidation value if the company can collect them. In this best-case scenario, the liquidation value could jump to $196.1 million or $1.38 a share. This represents an upside of 50% There is an Empty Half of the Glass for Latch's Story The company has already failed to file its second quarter 10-Q which is an ominous sign. This means that the figures discussed in this article might have changed dramatically. Also, the management team has been selling stock according to SEC Filings. I haven't been able to find an open-market purchase by any member of the management team, which hardly inspires confidence. But The Glass is Also Half Full Despite its troubles, Latch is still growing revenue almost triple digits. Its gross margins on the software side are a whopping 89%. The company simply faces the problem many other smaller companies face as a result of disrupted supply chains and inflation. These issues have meant it couldn't improve its gross margin profitability on the hardware side. While I personally wouldn't understand why a management would continue to sell a product it loses on when liquidity is looking like an issue, the fact the product is growing this strongly should count for something. The company cut more than 30% of the workforce. Also, supply chain and inflation-related issues will not last forever. If these issues are resolved in time, there is potential for multi-bagger returns and not just the 25-50% return mentioned in this article This is also a net-net situation after all so no investor should have an assumption that holding the stock will be a breeze. At the end of the day, Latch is a relatively small company with $50 million. Almost every company, regardless of how invincible it may be today, has faced a similar challenge to what Latch is facing today. So just because it seems like the company faces an uphill battle today, doesn't mean it is doomed to fail. Having said that, it is my opinion that no investor should concentrate into net-net stocks. They work best as a portfolio due to the high bankruptcy risk. In my personal experience, most net-nets I've seen work was because they were either liquidated or because they got lucky with their turnaround efforts. However, the absolute majority of net-nets I have come across burned through their cash and the stock ended up languishing lower than when it first became a net-net. That is why it is better to buy net-nets as a portfolio. It's the few winners that will more than make up for the losers. Ben Graham described investing in net-nets better than I ever will: I consider it a foolproof method of systematic investment--once again, not on the basis of individual results but in terms of the expectable group outcome.
Seeking Alpha Sep 13

Latch to provide NYC apartment residents with WeWork membership subscriptions

Latch (NASDAQ:LTCH), which makes an operating system for buildings called LatchOS, on Tuesday said it had entered into a partnership with workspace provider WeWork (NYSE:WE). Under the collaboration, certain residents in New York City that live in Latch-enabled buildings will be provided with WeWork's monthly membership subscription called WeWork All Access, LTCH said in a statement. The program will be available at select apartment buildings in New York City, with plans to expand throughout the metro area and, eventually, nationwide. Latch (LTCH), through its operating system, connects building services and residents and allows apartment dwellers to perform actions such as unlock their spaces, access building amenities, control smart home devices and schedule deliveries. Shares of LTCH initially jumped more than 20% in premarket hours, but pared all the gains and slipped into the red amid a broader market slump after trading started. LTCH stock was last down 1.2% at $1.23 in mid-day trading, while class A shares of WeWork (WE) were -8% at $3.97.
Seeking Alpha Aug 15

Latch receives non-compliance notification from Nasdaq for delay in filing quarterly report

Latch (NASDAQ:LTCH) received a letter from the Listing Qualifications Department of The Nasdaq that it did not comply with the listing rule related to filing of quarterly report on Form 10-Q  for the quarter ended June 30, 2022 by the required due date. On Aug.10, the company had notified the SEC of its inability to file the report. The company has been granted time until Oct.10, 2022 to submit a plan for regaining compliance; if plan is approved it will be granted extension of up to 180 calendar days from the due date to regain compliance. The notification has no impact on the listing of shares or warrants.
Seeking Alpha Jul 03

Making Buildings More Secure Is Leaving Latch Poorer

Latch is growing quickly, but at a significant cost. The company's cash burn is quickly consuming existing cash and equivalents. With Latch servicing just one percent of the market for access control and building software, growth should continue to be strong. Proptech firm Latch (LTCH) helps buildings become more secure. The company does this through a smart access system named LatchOS, a combination of hardware and software that manages who gains access to a building. With revenue for the New York-based company rapidly ramping, its bulls argue that Latch is opening up clear market leadership on the back of a strong technology stack. With LatchOS being used in more than 1 in 10 newly built U.S. apartments, this argument likely rings true. The company counts many large real estate development firms as partners, including AvalonBay (AVB), Brookfield (BAM), and Toll Brothers (TOL). The market for access control and building software is growing, with a number of public firms like SmartRent (SMRT) and private startups such as Dwelo and BeHome247 all competing for market share. Latch's management has placed this market at $54 billion in the United States, with an estimated 47 million rental homes. With LatchOS currently serving less than one per cent of this figure, the company's management has guided for significant revenue growth ahead. An ambition to fully capitalize on this market drove the company to go public in June 2021 with a merger with a Tishman Speyer blank check company. The transaction was completed at a $1.56 billion valuation, and Latch raised gross proceeds of $453 million from a long investor list that included Social Capital's Chamath Palihapitiya. Data by YCharts Latch's common share prices have since collapsed by 92% as growth stocks fell alongside a market pullback of historic proportions. Inflation running at multi-decade highs has forced the FED to become extremely hawkish in their roadmap for raising interest rates, bringing an end to an era of cheap liquidity. However, with Latch recording revenue of just $13.7 million for its last reported earnings period, its go-public valuation of $1.56 billion was always a stretch. Bears point to the extreme euphoria and excess of the SPAC market boom of early 2021, when Latch initially announced it would go public, as a critical factor in embedding overly optimistic revenue multiples to technology-related upstarts. The good times were never meant to last, hence Latch's public adventure presented an inherent exit for its private investors and a terrible deal for its early public backers. Cash Burn Rising As Revenue Ramps The company last released earnings for its fiscal 2022 first quarter, which saw total revenue come in at $13.7 million, a 106% increase from the year-ago period but a miss by $350,000 on consensus estimates. Software accounted for 22% of total revenue and grew by 88% year-over-year, as annual recurring revenue grew by 137% to reach $7.9 million. Latch Inc The company sees hardware sales as a loss-leader for higher-margin software sales. Indeed, sales of its physical locks were completed at a -21% gross margin during the quarter, compared to a gross margin of 89% for its software sales. However, and perhaps most alarming, net loss for the period grew to reach $44.2 million, up from $38.1 million in the year-ago quarter. This came as operating expenses grew by 61.5% from its year-ago figure. Negative free cash flow during the quarter was at $44.5 million, up from a cash burn of $14.6 million in the comparable year-ago period. This meant cash and equivalents continued its decline, reaching $264 million at the end of the quarter. With no real debt on its balance sheet, Latch's enterprise value stands at -$100 million, materially lower than its current market cap of $163.73 million. A negative enterprise value is rare and highlights just how much sentiment towards the company's stock has collapsed.
Seeking Alpha Apr 13

A Hard Look At Latch Inc.

Today, we put Latch Inc. in the spotlight for the first time. The company is seeing impressive revenue growth, but recently lowered forward guidance and is seeing considerable cash burn. A full investment analysis follows in the paragraphs below.
Articolo di analisi Mar 01

Time To Worry? Analysts Are Downgrading Their Latch, Inc. (NASDAQ:LTCH) Outlook

Today is shaping up negative for Latch, Inc. ( NASDAQ:LTCH ) shareholders, with the analysts delivering a substantial...
Articolo di analisi Feb 27

Latch, Inc. (NASDAQ:LTCH) Analysts Are Cutting Their Estimates: Here's What You Need To Know

There's been a major selloff in Latch, Inc. ( NASDAQ:LTCH ) shares in the week since it released its yearly report...
Seeking Alpha Jan 20

Latch: An Intelligent Speculation In Real Estate Tech

Latch designs smart building hardware and software for apartments and office buildings. The hardware is a loss leader for the recurring high margin software revenue. Latch has experienced triple-digit revenue growth and has a large amount of bookings, giving the company some visibility on future revenue. The company is led by its four founders and has a variety of experiences and skillsets on the management team. The warrants, which expire in June 2026, seem to be mispriced and could provide huge returns if the company continues on the same trajectory.
Seeking Alpha Oct 20

Latch: Use This Key Piece Of Data Before You Buy

Latch is a young company with a great recurring revenue business model. The company's revenue and earnings figures are negatively impacted by construction delays and supply shortages. Long-term investors should analyze specific survey data before purchasing shares.

Ripartizione dei ricavi e delle spese

Come Latch guadagna e spende denaro. In base agli ultimi utili dichiarati, su base LTM.


Storico di utili e ricavi

OTCPK:LTCH Ricavi, spese e utili (USD Millions )
DataRicaviUtiliSpese G+ASpese di R&S
31 Mar 2670-483216
31 Dec 2570-543518
30 Sep 2569-364518
30 Jun 2566-465220
31 Mar 2560-555518
31 Dec 2457-585117
30 Sep 2454-644715
30 Jun 2449-745420
31 Mar 2446-886126
31 Dec 2345-1086831
30 Sep 2342-1207034
30 Jun 2341-1286735
31 Mar 2341-1487843
31 Dec 2243-1629353
30 Sep 2241-18712064
30 Jun 2239-18612065
31 Mar 2236-17510655
31 Dec 2128-1679546
30 Sep 2121-1346735
30 Jun 2119-1175430
31 Mar 2115-904530
31 Dec 2013-673226
31 Dec 1915-502818

Guadagni di qualità: LTCH al momento non è redditizia.

Margine di profitto in crescita: LTCH al momento non è redditizia.


Flusso di cassa libero e analisi degli utili


Analisi della crescita degli utili nel passato

Andamento degli utili: LTCH non è redditizia, ma ha ridotto le perdite negli ultimi 5 anni a un tasso pari a 23.7% all'anno.

Accelerare la crescita: Impossibile confrontare la crescita degli utili di LTCH nell'ultimo anno con la sua media quinquennale poiché al momento non è redditizia

Guadagni vs Settore: LTCH non è redditizia, il che rende difficile confrontare la crescita dei suoi utili dell'anno passato con il settore Software ( 11.2% ).


Rendimento del capitale proprio

ROE elevato: LTCH ha un Return on Equity negativo ( -92.68% ), in quanto al momento non è redditizio.


Rendimento delle attività


Rendimento del capitale investito


Scoprire le aziende con forti performance passate

Analisi aziendale e situazione dei dati finanziari

DatiUltimo aggiornamento (ora UTC)
Analisi dell'azienda2026/05/18 08:30
Prezzo dell'azione a fine giornata2026/05/15 00:00
Utili2026/03/31
Utili annuali2025/12/31

Fonti dei dati

I dati utilizzati nella nostra analisi aziendale provengono da S&P Global Market Intelligence LLC. I seguenti dati sono utilizzati nel nostro modello di analisi per generare questo report. I dati sono normalizzati, il che può comportare un ritardo nella disponibilità della fonte.

PacchettoDatiTempisticaEsempio Fonte USA *
Dati finanziari della società10 anni
  • Conto economico
  • Rendiconto finanziario
  • Bilancio
Stime di consenso degli analisti+3 anni
  • Previsioni finanziarie
  • Obiettivi di prezzo degli analisti
Prezzi di mercato30 anni
  • Prezzi delle azioni
  • Dividendi, scissioni e azioni
Proprietà10 anni
  • Top azionisti
  • Insider trading
Gestione10 anni
  • Team di leadership
  • Consiglio di amministrazione
Sviluppi principali10 anni
  • Annunci aziendali

* Esempio per i titoli statunitensi, per i titoli non statunitensi si utilizzano forme e fonti normative equivalenti.

Se non specificato, tutti i dati finanziari si basano su un periodo annuale ma vengono aggiornati trimestralmente. Si tratta dei cosiddetti dati TTM (Trailing Twelve Month) o LTM (Last Twelve Month). Per saperne di più.

Modello di analisi e Snowflake

I dettagli del modello di analisi utilizzato per generare questo report sono disponibili sulla nostra pagina Github; abbiamo anche guide su come utilizzare i nostri report e tutorial su Youtube.

Scoprite il team di livello mondiale che ha progettato e realizzato il modello di analisi Simply Wall St.

Metriche di settore e industriali

Le nostre metriche di settore e di sezione sono calcolate ogni 6 ore da Simply Wall St; i dettagli del nostro processo sono disponibili su Github.

Fonti analitiche

Latch, Inc. è coperta da 11 analisti. 0 di questi analisti ha fornito le stime di fatturato o di utile utilizzate come input per il nostro report. Le stime degli analisti vengono aggiornate nel corso della giornata.

AnalistaIstituzione
Joseph VruwinkBaird
Mark SchappelBenchmark Company
Justin AgesBerenberg