Dropbox falls as charge on real estate in shift to remote leads to wider quarterly net loss

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Dropbox falls as charge on real estate in shift to remote leads to wider quarterly net loss
Dropbox CEO Drew HoustonMatt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images
  • Dropbox fell as much as 5% on Friday after turning in a fourth-quarter net loss of $346 million.
  • The company took a quarterly charge on real-estate assets following its shift to remote work during the COVID-19 outbreak.
  • Dropbox's adjusted earnings of $0.28 per share beat expectations of $0.24 per share.
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Dropbox stock fell as much as 5% Friday, with the cloud-storage provider turning in a fourth-quarter net loss as a shift to remote work led to a charge related to real estate.

The company's net loss was $345.8 million, wider than its loss of $6.6 million a year ago and a swing from profit of $32.7 million in the third quarter.

Shares of Dropbox fell as much as nearly 5% to $23.31. It's added on nearly 10% during the year and 8.5% over the last 12 months.

Dropbox recorded a non-recurring impairment charge of $398.2 million in the fourth quarter for "right-of-use and other lease related assets."

The charge stems from its reassessment of real estate assets, which will include subleasing some of its space. In October, the San Francisco-based company said employees working remotely "will be the primary experience" and "the day-to-day default for individual work" under its "Virtual First" program.

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Dropbox acknowledged the "abrupt shift" to remote work in 2020 during which numerous companies transitioned to work outside of offices because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The impairment charge was not part of its adjusted earnings, which came in at $0.28 per share compared with $0.16 a year earlier. Analysts, on average, had expected earnings of $0.24 per share.

Revenue climbed to $504.1 million from $446 million a year earlier, surpassing Wall Street's target of $498 million.

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