- Previous Close
802.97 - Open
802.00 - Bid 793.06 x 100
- Ask 794.30 x 100
- Day's Range
790.15 - 807.07 - 52 Week Range
677.80 - 914.93 - Volume
341,570 - Avg. Volume
568,726 - Market Cap (intraday)
75.369B - Beta (5Y Monthly) 0.68
- PE Ratio (TTM)
79.42 - EPS (TTM)
10.00 - Earnings Date Aug 7, 2024
- Forward Dividend & Yield 17.04 (2.15%)
- Ex-Dividend Date May 21, 2024
- 1y Target Est
905.73
Equinix (Nasdaq: EQIX) is the world's digital infrastructure company . Digital leaders harness Equinix's trusted platform to bring together and interconnect foundational infrastructure at software speed. Equinix enables organizations to access all the right places, partners and possibilities to scale with agility, speed the launch of digital services, deliver world-class experiences and multiply their value, while supporting their sustainability goals.
www.equinix.com13,354
Full Time Employees
December 31
Fiscal Year Ends
Sector
Industry
Recent News: EQIX
View MorePerformance Overview: EQIX
Trailing total returns as of 7/24/2024, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is
.YTD Return
1-Year Return
3-Year Return
5-Year Return
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Statistics: EQIX
View MoreValuation Measures
Market Cap
75.33B
Enterprise Value
91.08B
Trailing P/E
79.61
Forward P/E
67.57
PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
5.47
Price/Sales (ttm)
9.01
Price/Book (mrq)
6.12
Enterprise Value/Revenue
10.95
Enterprise Value/EBITDA
26.71
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
Profit Margin
11.94%
Return on Assets (ttm)
1.97%
Return on Equity (ttm)
7.73%
Revenue (ttm)
7.88B
Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
941.18M
Diluted EPS (ttm)
10.00
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
Total Cash (mrq)
1.53B
Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
140.19%
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
2.57B
Research Analysis: EQIX
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Research Reports: EQIX
View MoreEquinix Earnings: Relief Regarding Accounting Practices Outweighs Mundane Results and Guidance
Equinix operates 260 data centers in 71 markets worldwide. It generates 44% of total revenue in the Americas, 35% in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, and 21% in Asia-Pacific. The firm has more than 10,000 customers, including 2,100 network providers, that are dispersed over five verticals: cloud and IT services, content providers, network and mobile services, financial services, and enterprise. About 70% of Equinix's revenue comes from renting space to tenants and related services, and more than 15% comes from interconnection. Equinix operates as a real estate investment trust.
RatingPrice TargetEquinix Earnings: Relief Regarding Accounting Practices Outweighs Mundane Results and Guidance
Equinix operates 260 data centers in 71 markets worldwide. It generates 44% of total revenue in the Americas, 35% in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, and 21% in Asia-Pacific. The firm has more than 10,000 customers, including 2,100 network providers, that are dispersed over five verticals: cloud and IT services, content providers, network and mobile services, financial services, and enterprise. About 70% of Equinix's revenue comes from renting space to tenants and related services, and more than 15% comes from interconnection. Equinix operates as a real estate investment trust.
RatingPrice TargetAI and cloud momentum driving growth
Equinix is a real estate investment trust focusing on interconnected data centers. EQIX develops data center platforms and architecture for businesses involved in cloud software, IT, financial services, and mobile services. The company offers secure networks and cloud-neutral data platforms, and is leveraged to the secular transition away from on-premises data centers to cloud colocation centers. The company provides over 462,000 interconnections and operates more than 260 data centers on six continents, in over 70 global metro areas, and over 30 countries with a growing focus on hyperscale centers. About half of centers are wholly owned. Approximately 44% of current revenue comes from the Americas, 36% from EMEA, and 20% from the Asia-Pacific region. About three-quarters of recurring revenues come from colocation. The top 10 customers account for about 18% of MRR. Current expansion is focused on Africa, India, and South America. EQIX shares are a component of the S&P 500. The market cap is $73 billion.
RatingPrice TargetThe stock market in May has shrugged off a difficult April. But even
The stock market in May has shrugged off a difficult April. But even with the strong 'buy the dip' reversal, investors are anything but confident in the market's advance, given some shaky economic underpinnings. Inflation continues to weigh not just on consumers' thinking but more than ever on their large-ticket and discretionary purchases. Both of the most recent quarterly GDP and nonfarm payrolls reports represented a step down from prior readings. Cooling in the economy provided the Fed cover for its first rate cut of the current cycle. Yet the language from Fed officials seems to signal that the central bank is in no hurry to begin cutting rates. The election, and not just the presidential election, is moving into its mean season; the fraught and angry partisanship can weigh on consumer behavior and investor confidence. Despite these and other challenges, the bull has pressed on. Historically, bull markets have successfully climbed walls of worry, many more formidable than the current one. But investors need to remain confident this bull still has legs. The Market as of End of May The market would not be up if the outlook was all gloom. Corporate earnings continue to outperform expectations, which along with declining rates of inflation is preventing a rising market from appearing overvalued. GDP growth was subpar in 1Q24, but it was positive; and imports and the change in private inventories may have distorted the real growth in the economy. Although Fed officials are playing it close to the vest, most investors expect the next move in fiscal policy - whether in 2024 or 2025 - will be a reduction in the fed funds rate. As of the Friday before Memorial Day weekend, the S&P 500 was up 11.8% year-to-date on a total return basis. At a close of 5,305 as of 5/24/24, the S&P 500 was 0.3% below its all-time closing high of 5,321. The Nasdaq, which has slightly lagged the S&P 500 for almost all of 2024, has finally moved ahead and was up 13.1% as of 5/24/24; the Nasdaq hit an all-time closing high of 16,921. The DJIA is up a lesser 4.4% on a total return basis for 2024, hurt by big bank stocks, technology also-rans such as Intel, and outliers such as Boeing. The Dow at 39,070 as of 5/24/24 is about 2.5% below its all-time high above 40,000. At the sector level, the advance in 2024 is broad-based and thus much healthier than the tightly concentrated market in 2023. Again as of 5/24/24, Communication Services was up 21.6% year to date, making it the only 20%-plus gainer. A year earlier, three sectors were up over 20% and well out in front of the broad market while the other eight sectors were languishing. In second place is Information Technology, up 18%; Technology has used the May bounce-back to usurp the silver medal from now third-place Utilities. This traditional defensive sector is rising even though the Fed's timeline for its first rate cut keeps getting pushed back. Investors are also betting that Utilities will benefit from growth in power-hungry data centers as demand for generative AI kicks into a higher gear. After the top three, another four sectors - Financial, Energy, Industrials, and Consumer Staples - are up in the 9%-11% range year to date, approximately tracking the broad market. Materials and Healthcare are both up 6%-7%. Consumer Discretionary, one of 2023's winners, is barely above breakeven in 2024. Although this sector represents less than 10% of the market, its lagging performance should not be ignored. If most consumers are unable to make big-ticket and discretionary purchases, all aspects of the industrial and commercial economy will be impacted to some degree. Real Estate is the only negative sector in 2024. This sector is punching above its weight, and not in a good way. The stagnation in the housing market keeps boomers locked in too-big homes, distorts prices for the homes that are available, and keep millennials and other generations locked in the renter cycle. Underperformance in these two bottom sectors signals ongoing pressures in the economy that are difficult to resolve in a high interest rate environment. The Market Does Not Like Those Hazy, Lazy Days of Summer The U.S. does not exist in a vacuum, and solid trends in global stocks are a positive for U.S. investors. Much of that strength is concentrated in mature economy markets such as the Eurozone, which includes large trading partners. China too has turned around, in what may be a sign that China's economic struggles are resolving; or it may be another head-fake. For U.S. investors, the warm weather has historically brought a meaningful slow-down in the stock market. In any year, stock-market gains tend to be concentrated in the early month and the later months. That often leaves the June-September period dead in the water, or with feeble gains at best. May itself has been a good stock month, averaging capital appreciation of 0.88% on the S&P 500 for all years from 1980 through 2023. There are of course outliers either way, including a 6.6% decline in 2019 and a 4.5% gain the next year in 2020. While May has been generally good, June has averaged just a 0.25% gain over that 1980-2023 period. July has been among the strongest months with a 1.36% average gain, but it is followed by August (down 0.02%) and September (down 1.07%) over the 1980-2023 period. For all years in the survey period, June through September has averaged total capital appreciation of just 1.1% on the S&P 500. Performance since the millennial turn in 2000 is actually worse with a four-month gain of just 0.1%. Just since 2009 as the economy came out of the great recession, summer has averaged better-than-average capital appreciation of 2.7%. Conclusion Just a few days after Memorial Day, it is a bit early to say goodbye to 'Wall Street summer,' which stretches between the two holidays with no regard for the calendar summer. But when we do say goodbye to summer, the Fed either will have or will not have made its first rate cut. And regardless of the Fed, the election will be heating to fever pitch. Stock markets that do well in the January-May period tend to end with solid full-year wins on the S&P 500. But investors are unlikely to feel comfortable with that statistical outcome until inflation breaks its stalemate and moves toward the Fed's 2% target, and the Fed responds with its first rate cut in the cycle.