- A core-satellite portfolio splits investments into stable core holdings and higher-risk satellite picks.
- The core is usually 60% of the portfolio, with satellites at 40%.
- It blends passive index investing with active opportunity bets.


Spotify beat Q1 estimates and got punished for it. Shares fell more than 13% Tuesday after the company's Q2 guidance came in light on both subscribers and profit. The stock had already entered the day down 14% on the year.
The earnings beat is real. The story underneath it is that price hikes can only do so much.
Q1 revenue rose 8% from a year ago to 4.5 billion euros, or about $5.3 billion. That came in just above FactSet estimates.
The free tier hit 761 million monthly active users. That's a 12% jump from the year before. It also cleared Street estimates.
On the paid side, subscribers climbed 9% to 293 million. The firm added 3 million during the quarter.
On paper, those are clean numbers across the board.
The Q2 outlook is what the market reacted to. Spotify expects to add 17 million net users to reach 778 million MAUs. That's slightly above Street estimates.
Premium subscriber guidance is the soft spot. Spotify expects 6 million net adds to bring the total to 299 million. Wall Street wanted that number to clear 300.4 million.
Operating income guidance came in at 630 million euros, below the roughly 680 million the Street had penciled in. Spotify warned the forecast is "subject to substantial uncertainty."
Spotify has been raising prices for two straight years to push profits higher. In February, the US monthly premium price moved from $11.99 to $12.99.
The earnings beat shows the strategy works on revenue. The guidance miss says it has limits on subscribers.
Each price hike trims the gap between someone hitting "subscribe" and someone sticking with free. That tradeoff is now showing up in the Q2 numbers.
Spotify is adding free users faster than premium ones, which is the opposite of how the model is supposed to work.
Spotify built its whole case on the idea that the free tier feeds the premium tier. The Q2 guidance is the first quarter where that funnel looks slower under the weight of higher prices.
Free users are still showing up at full speed. The conversion to paid is what is lagging.
That matters because operating income lives on the premium side of the business. Free users alone don't pay the bills.
Spotify is not the only streaming firm pushing prices higher. Netflix, Disney+, and others have all raised rates over the last two years. The bet was that customers would stay.
Spotify's Q2 print is the first clear sign that those bets have a ceiling. If users push back at $12.99, the next round of hikes gets harder.
The next set of numbers will tell investors whether Q2 is a one-quarter pause or the start of a real ceiling on premium subscriber growth. If the free-to-paid conversion rate keeps slipping at the new price, Spotify's path to higher margins gets narrower fast.
Even with revenue still growing in the high single digits, the math on profit gets harder if paid growth keeps cooling.