U.S.-listed shares of the company were down about 6% in trading before the bell.
Ottawa-based Shopify – which helps merchants set up online stores through subscription-based software tools, while offering services such as shipping to payments – benefited during the pandemic as businesses quickly moved online to ride a boom in e-commerce.
“We believe that the COVID-triggered acceleration of ecommerce that spilled into the first half of 2021 in the form of lockdowns and government stimulus will be absent from 2022, and there is caution around inflation and consumer spend near term,” the company said in a statement.
It expects revenue growth for 2022 to be lower than the 57% rise recorded in 2021.
For the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, revenue was $1.38 billion, compared with $977.7 million a year earlier. Analysts were expecting $1.33 billion, according to Refinitiv data.
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Gross merchandise volume, which is the total amount of sales the company raked in, was $54.1 billion, an increase of 31%.
On an adjusted basis, it earned $1.36 per share compared with analysts estimate of $1.27.
Shopify has lost its title of being Canada’s most valuable company after its shares shed more than a third of their value this year.