Reader Mailbag: Investing in the Online Gambling Market

Reader Question:

Online sports gambling has the potential to allow integrated gaming resort operators to scale their revenue dramatically beyond their physical footprint capacity. Do you see the online gambling opportunity evolving in a "winner take all" fashion or will multiple players capture a meaningful stake? Who do you think is best positioned at this early stage - established online betting companies or the integrated resort operators?

I have been amazed at the valuations being afforded to the online sports and casino betting operators in recent months. I understand that legalizing sports gambling across the country is going to expand revenue for the players in this space, as a lot of illegal bets will be moved over to legal platforms, but I think the jury is still out as to whether the ultimate profits generated from the increased revenue, and the impact on physical casino operations, will justify current valuations and expectations. Before I answer your question directly, let me share some thoughts on how investors might think about the profit potential for all of the competitors.

1) Although the “handle” (dollar value of all bets placed) of online sports betting is going to be a very large number, we need to keep in mind that very little of that trickles down to the bet taker.

The “revenue” generated from the handle (the pile of cash leftover after all winning bets are paid out) is typically a high single digit percentage of total bets taken. Out of that stack of money, each state is going to take a cut as a tax generator (this is why so many states are eager to accept bets in the first place). Some are more reasonable (Nevada takes 6.75% of revenue) than others (Pennsylvania takes a whopping 36%). And then don’t forget that casinos have operating expenses associated with sportsbooks, in the form of labor and technology.

All in all, let’s assume revenue equal to 8% of the total handle, a pre-tax operating profit margin of 50%, and a 15% average tax rate across the entire country. In that scenario, for every $1 billion of bets made, the casinos will net an all-in profit of $28 million. And they will have to pay income tax on that amount at the corporation level, which brings that figure down to about $22 million. Investors should think about that math when evaluating the public market valuations of the companies in this space.

2) If the gambling customer can whip out their phones and place bets on sports with an app, it certainly increases the odds that they will bet, but that is a double-edged sword because casinos have a lot of fixed costs and one of the ways they make money from their buildings is from ancillary revenue during an actual visit to their casino.

You visit to bet on a college football game on Saturday, but while you are there you eat at the buffet, have a few beers, and throw a few bucks on roulette during halftime. The casino winds up making more profit from that spending than they do on the actual sports bet itself. If you are betting from your couch at home, you eat your own food and drink your own beer. With a large fixed cost base, having less revenue being generated inside the four walls of your building is not the most efficient business model from an operating leverage standpoint.

Okay, so who do I think will be the winners in this space? I can easily see a handful of players taking the vast majority of the business. Penn National has dozens of physical properties scattered across the country (the most of anyone), so betters know them well. The online-only players like Draftkings and Fandual will get a lot of the folks who rarely visit casinos. That customer could also use the Fox app since they are watching on TV already. And a big chunk of the the Las Vegas business would seemingly go to MGM since they are the dominant casino operator on the strip.

So my guess would be that given the existing market positions and brands, those five would get the lionshare of the bets. How much? Hard to say, but it would not surprise me if the 80/20 rule roughly applies here.

Reader Mailbag: Merits of Shorting Tesla

Reader Question:

I am curious of your take on the benefits of shorting tiny amounts of TSLA at these levels (~$850). At +800B valuation there isn't almost any room to grow reasonably. The reward of shorting might not be very big, but neither appears to be the risk.

Many skilled short sellers often give the advice that shorting based solely on valuation is unwise. I suspect the reason is that while fundamentals do matter over the long term, in the near term, investor sentiment dictates stock movements more. The stock price action of Tesla over the last year shows this clear as day.

Accordingly, if you are early and nothing fundamentally negative occurs at TSLA for the next 6-12 months, then there is nothing stopping the stock from continuing to rise. While there are lots of positives that have already played out (S&P 500 addition, fortifying their balance sheet, etc), the list of negative catalysts is harder to pinpoint. It might be more of a lack of further positive news, which could halt the momentum, as opposed to negative news.

I think TSLA is a unique business situation, much like AMZN, in the sense that their founder and CEO is not going to constrain the company to just making cars and solar panels (just as Mr. Bezos didn’t stop at books and music). As long as that is the “story” bullish investors have at their disposal, you can almost justify any valuation, including the current near-$1 trillion level. And that is the potential problem with shorting it due to overvaluation. The bulls are not buying it because the valuation looks fair; they are buying it because they believe Elon will change the world, much like Amazon has.

Along those lines, the many comparisons of TSLA’s market cap with every other auto maker in the world (combined) are easily tossed aside as irrelevant. The same notion turned out to be right when comparing Amazon to Wal-Mart a decade ago. But what if every car company transforms their fleets to EVs over the next 20 years, won’t TSLA just be another car company? Perhaps, but what if they provide the batteries and software for the majority of the industry at that point? How much is that worth? I have no clue.

I am not trying to make the case that TSLA is a buy at current levels. I do find the valuation extreme for a manufacturing company. From 2012 through 2019 the stock fetched a year-end trailing price-to-sales ratio of anywhere between 2.5x and 9.0x. At year-end 2020 that metric was over 25x. Industrial businesses don’t earn profit margins high enough to justify that kind of valuation, but the bulls will tell me TSLA is really a software play and eventually will have the largest network of self-driving EVs on the planet. Do I have a strong conviction that they are all crazy? Not really. Amazon turned out to be a computer services company as much as a retailer, and might be adding logistics management and advertising to that list too.

I simply don’t know how we value that possibility with TSLA. Shorting Amazon on valuation has never worked in 25 years. While I am confident that Ford and GM won’t be software companies eventually, I can’t say the same for TSLA. Given this narrative and reality, it is hard to place a fair value price for the stock, and therefore, hard to know when to short and when to be long.

In your question, you state that there “isn’t almost any room to grow reasonably” from current levels. Given the above narrative, I am less confident. Can we really say with conviction that TSLA can’t double their market cap by 2028 (a 10% annual CAGR from here)? I can’t, just as I can’t say with conviction that the business is worth 5x or 10x sales instead of 25x. To your point, though, if you short a tiny amount, there is not a ton of risk. in doing so. I completely agree.

Is it going to be hard for TSLA to grow enough to justify the current valuation? Absolutely. Could the stock easily be $500 a year from now, making a short position today pay off nicely? Absolutely. But I think the more interesting question is “of all the stocks out there to be long or short, does shorting TSLA rise to make the top 10 or 20 highest conviction ideas you have with which to build a portfolio?” If so, then there is your answer. If not, then I would say why not take a pass and, as Mr. Buffett would say, put it in the too hard pile?

Another part of your question got me thinking. You wrote that “the rewards of shorting aren’t very big.” Given the unlimited loss potential of shorting stocks in general, it seems that a large potential gain could be considered a prerequisite for shorting anything, TSLA included. Something to think about, as I suspect some will agree and others won’t.

All in all, I think TSLA is emblematic of the current bull market in the tech space; one where future growth potential is valued highly and current valuations and corporate profits are not. As a contrarian, value-oriented investor, I am disheartened by that development (and I don’t think it will end well for many speculators), but we also don’t know if/when the tides will shift and by how much. Given that, I tend to think that taking a lot of pitches in the batter’s box is a fair approach, especially when there are so many easier investment options out there to take a swing at.

That said, if the equity market breaks down at some point this year, it is reasonable to think the momentum plays could lead on the downside, in which case TSLA could easily fall hundreds of dollars per share. There are arguments on both sides, for sure, so then it just comes down to how much conviction you have to ultimately decide it is worth betting on one of those potential outcomes with Tesla, versus other securities.

Reader Mailbag: Overstock, tZERO, and Crypto Hype

Reader Question:

How much is tZero contributing to OSTK's PR and balance sheets? How much actual business/revenue value are generally crypto companies generating versus stock valuation pump due to the hype around everything crypto?

It is hard to speak about crypto companies generally in terms of business value vs financial market hype because there is a such a wide range within the sector. On one hand, some companies are all hype (press releases without much in the way of products or revenue) and on the other you have some, like Overstock’s tZERO business unit, that have press releases, products, and revenue (just no profits).

There is no doubt that Overstock’s share price is being valued partly on its crypto assets. While the pandemic certainly boosted their home furnishings e-commerce business, going up against the likes of Amazon and Wayfair is a tough task (one that they have been losing) and 2021 is likely going to present tough comparisons year-over-year from a sales perspective.

As for tZERO, below is a three-year summary of the financial results Overstock has reported in their 2019 10-K annual report filing (full year 2020 results have yet to be released).

TZERO-fin.png

As you can see, tZERO does have some business lines generating revenue, but they are relatively small compared with OSTK’s $5 billion current equity market value. More importantly, the crypto business has been losing roughly $2 for every $1 of revenue it brings in. This is not surprising, as there are not a lot of profitable crypto businesses right now (exchanges are likely the highest margin given that trading volumes are strong, relative to actual utility of tokens more generally).

It should not be surprising then, that Overstock recently announced plans to contribute its crypto assets along with nearly $45 million of cash into a Limited Partnership managed by an external third party. You can read the details here, but essentially OSTK is funding the LP with cash (likely to cover operating losses) and taking a 99% stake as limited partner. The outside manager will be the general partner, make all operational decisions for an annual management fee of $2.5 million, and will receive a performance fee based on the sale of any assets from the partnership.

By making this move, it sure looks like OSTK has decided it does not want to continue to fund operating losses in its crypto businesses. The hiring of a third party manager with a financial incentive to sell the assets seems like a bet that it makes sense to sell while people are willing to fall all over themselves to plow money into a sector that has yet to show it can offer a return from operations (but rather, just by selling currencies to someone else for a higher price).

Perhaps most interesting is that in its deal with this new LP, Overstock has published NAVs for each of its assets within the partnership, and they total less than $200 million (less than $5 per OSTK share). The current stock price would indicate they are worth far more than that. We will have to wait and see how easy it is for them to be sold, and how much capital can be raised in the process.

Full Disclosure: The author of this post was short shares of Overstock at the time of writing, but positions may change at any time and the short position is 75% smaller today than it was at its peak during 2020

Do you have a question you would like answered on the blog? Contact me from this site or message me on Twitter (@peridotcapital)

Reader Mailbag: Playing the Covid-19 Vaccine

Reader Question:

Do you think it is too late to invest in the players involved in developing vaccines for Covid-19? If not, is it better to go with the large companies or the smaller upstarts?

I think there are two angles here. First, Covid itself. I doubt anyone really knows whether these vaccines will be effective enough to get rid of Covid (for the most part) within a year or two, or if we are dealing with a new virus that is constantly mutating and here to stay, in which case annual Covid shots are probably in our future. Since the experts would probably punt on this question, I will too. It sure seems too early to rule out annual shots that would likely be solid moneymakers for the companies involved, but I am not sold on the idea that we should place an investment bet on one of those trajectories, as there is still plenty we don’t know.

The more interesting topic in my eyes is the notion that this pandemic has accelerated the development of mRNA therapeutics, we have evidence that the mechanism works (at least in the short term, longer term data is not available yet), and thus it is fair to ask whether this has been a proof of concept phase that will also accelerate the development of similar compounds for indications other than Covid.

In my view, this seems very plausible, and maybe even extremely likely. If this is not just a one-time boon for companies like Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson, Moderna, and BioNTech, then it is probably not too late to invest based on that particular thesis.

So in that case, do you go with the big players or the smaller ones? I think the smaller firms have a leg up from a long term investment standpoint. The industry giants like Pfizer and J&J are so big that the impact of new technologies has a limit in terms of how much they can swing the earnings of these conglomerates. Add in the fact that they have existing products on a rolling schedule of patent expirations, and there are more offsets to the growing parts of their business. The same thing simply isn’t true for the likes of Moderna and BioNTech, and it is also entirely possible the former group eventually offers big money to acquire the latter group.

Taking this thought experiment one step further, I think it is interesting to compare Moderna and BioNTech since they are both publicly traded and have Covid vaccines on the market. While Moderna’s equity market value is currently 2.5 times larger than BioNTech, the latter company has more employees and is expected to generate roughly 75% as much revenue ($7.84 billion) in 2021 (according to the current consensus forecasts on Wall Street) as Moderna ($10.5 billion).

Now, these revenue forecasts are probably only guesses at this point, and having more people doesn’t mean you will have more success in the lab, but given the valuation gap, it seems like there might be more investment value on a relative risk/reward basis with BioNTech.

I have been thinking about that comparison for a while, although I have not yet invested in any of these companies. However, it remains top of mind, especially as the market’s strength affords us fewer and fewer bargains by the day.

Full Disclosure: No positions in the companies mentioned at the time of writing, but that may change at any time

Reader Mailbag: GameStop and Possible Regulatory Reform

Reader Question:

Do you think regulators should make any reforms to prevent future instances of the GameStop saga (and do you think they actually will)?

I am usually a proponent of simple regulatory reforms that a majority of rational market participants would support. Before relating this to GameStop, let’s rewind back to the Great Recession more than a decade ago. As was explained beautifully in The Big Short, one of the biggest problems with the mortgage crisis was the pervasive use of credit default swaps, which is just a fancy type of “insurance for creditors.”

Having a way to hedge your investment is not inherently bad. The problem with CDS is that there were no limits on who could buy it and how much they could buy. Imagine Company A has $10 billion of debt on their books and the holders of that debt want to hedge against a bankruptcy filing. It is logical that regulators would allow insurance to be purchased on that debt, but the maximum insured amount should really only be $10 billion. The situation gets very dicey when anyone can buy this insurance (even those who don’t hold the debt) and they can do so in any amount another party is willing to write for them (e.g. $100 billion of insurance on a $10 billion bond).

If the debt becomes worthless, in this example, whereas the economic loss should have been limited to $10 billion, instead the markets have to absorb $110 billion of losses. So a manageable problem becomes a major calamity in short order, and can bring down an entire market.

So how does this relate to GameStop? Well, it has been widely reported that the short interest in GME stock at one point was ~140% of the public outstanding float. How on earth can more than 100% of a stock be borrowed and sold short? Well, because the short selling rules, much like the CDS rules, don’t place any limits on how many times the same share of stock can be lent out and sold.

Therefore, if I lend 1 share of GME to a short seller, they go out and sell it to someone else. The new long holder of my share doesn’t know if their share was lent out or not, they just know they are long one share. And they are allowed to lend that same share out to another short seller, who takes it and sells it to someone else. In this case, we are dealing with 1 share of actual stock that gets lent out twice. 3 people are long 1 share and 2 people are short 1 share, which nets out to 1 long share. but the short interest (2 shares shorted) is equal to 200% of the float (the original single share owned).

Just as limiting the use of CDS contracts to the principal amount of the debt being hedged, and to only those who actually own the debt itself, would be considered a logical, fair, and reasonable regulation (no, such a rule does not exist post-mortgage crisis… CDS operate exactly the same as before), we can easily argue that short selling should be limited in some way. How about only allowing each share of outstanding stock to be lent out one time, thereby eliminating the chance that the short interest ever rises above 100%?

Do I think such regulations will be enacted? No. These issues have a way of disappearing quickly enough that people are let off the hook for making sound reforms. In the case of the current GameStop situation, hedge funds will pull back on their shorts enough that extreme cases like this do not reoccur, and the regulators will likely punt on reforms again. Heck, GME is already trading sub-$50 per share.

Author’s note: Theoretically, a short interest above 100% is not actually accurate, even in cases like the one described above. In that example, there are 3 longs and 2 shorts, so the actual percentage of shorted shares is 67% (2/3). When viewed this way, continuous lending and shorting of the same share would result in a short interest approaching, but never exceeding 100%. There is an insightful article discussing this on the ShortSight web site.

Do you have a question you would like answered on the blog? Contact me from this site or message me on Twitter (@peridotcapital)

November 2019 Reader Mailbag – Part 2/2

Thank you to everyone who submitted questions for this blog’s first ever “Reader Mailbag.” Below is the second half of this month’s 10 questions and answers. If you would like to submit a question for the next mailbag series, you can leave a message in the comments or send a direct message via Twitter (@peridotcapital) and I will publish the next round after we get enough submissions.

Question #1: “I am wondering how you think about the renewal risk to Wynn Macau with respect to valuing Wynn Resorts. I am also curious how you view the relative merits of investing in Wynn Macau vs. Wynn Resorts particularly at this point.”

There is a lot of market chatter about the risk of the current U.S./China trade war impacting how Macau officials will approach the process of allowing U.S. resort operators, such as Wynn Resorts (WYNN) to renew their gaming licenses.

My view is that Macau is very unlikely to conclude that it is in their best interest to kick out the U.S. operators, either directly or by making renewal costs overly burdensome. Firms like WYNN have great long-term track records of building attractions that Macau wants and has asked for (more entertainment, less focus on gaming) and they have access to relatively low-cost capital to continue to build and improve their resorts. Forcing them to sell to less financially secure and less experienced operators (to exit the market) would probably not benefit the region. If renewals costs are so big that they materially reduce returns in the region, companies will invest less as a result. I am betting they make an economic decision in 2022 with respect to gaming license renewals, as opposed to a politically motivated one.

In terms of investing in WYNN vs their Macau subsidiary, I think it really depends on what exposure you are looking for. If someone wanted to get international equity exposure and chooses a Macau gaming stock to check the box for that region, that seems logical. Since I invest mostly in U.S. businesses, I prefer having the diversity of WYNN’s exposure to Las Vegas, Boston, and Macau, especially since the company only has 5 resorts in their total portfolio. They are concentrated enough as it is, leaving little reason for me to go further and invest only in 2 instead of 5.

Full disclosure: I am long WYNN personally and for my clients, as I expect free cash flow to ramp materially beginning in 2020 and the stock looks cheap relative to where I see cash flow going on a per-share basis over the next few years.

Question #2: “Within the U.S. do you expect active value investing to make a comeback over passive investing?”

Much like the economy and the financial markets, I think passive investing is also cyclical. This decade the S&P 500 has averaged about +13.5% annually. Active managers can’t really keep up with that kind of bull market, hence passive investing has exploded in the last 10 years.

But what happens when the market stops going up so impressively? Will people still throw all their savings in index funds, assume low double-digit annual returns forever, and plan early retirements (as some folks in their 30’s are doing this cycle)? Seems unlikely to me.

History also supports this view. Were people piling into index funds and singing the praises of passive investing during the decade that immediately preceded the current one? Was Warren Buffett telling people to buy index funds while at the same time doing the exact opposite himself (and hiring active managers to eventually replace him)? Certainly not, but the important question is why?

There is only one reason that I can see; because the S&P 500 started trading at 1,469 in January 2000 and closed out December 2009 at 1,115. That’s a 24% loss that even an entire decade of dividends could not completely offset.

I suspect the next secular bear market will disappoint a lot of people who relied too much on the passive investing concept. The combination of inadequate thoroughness in strategic planning and some bad luck with respect to their timing will inflict plenty of pain in that scenario.

Question #3: “Charles Schwab is up quite a bit since you wrote about it. Are you selling or still holding long-term?”

Talk about a perfect example of how the daily Wall Street pricing mechanism is inefficient in the short term, even for well-followed, large cap companies (that many believe “the market” gets mostly right most of the time).

I wrote about Charles Schwab (SCHW) on October 10th, after the stock dropped 15% after voluntarily giving up about 4% of revenue by cutting trading commissions to zero. Not only was that downward stock move excessive, but the chatter after every competitor followed suit was that more industry consolidation was coming. In that case, why would Schwab not participate? I was in the majority camp that thought AMTD would buy ETFC, but SCHW jumping in first and grabbing the former, if the deal winds up closing, is a brilliant move.

As for the stock, when the news of the AMTD bid hit the wires on November 21st, SCHW stock topped $50 and I hit the sell button quickly (unfortunately, it was a relatively small position so I was only mildly thrilled). A reasonable fair value was probably in the 40’s and if the AMTD deal is 15-20% accretive by (as they have guided to), then $50-ish today seems about right to me.

Looking at the bigger picture: when a stock jumps 40% in 6 weeks, it really can change my thinking as to whether to continue to hold it or not. If you get 2-3 years’ worth of gains in less than 2 months, there are probably better uses for that capital. Since I had other stocks that I liked better than SCHW (at that $50 quote), I didn’t hesitate to sell and move on. Just because a company would be a good long-term holding does not mean that price does not play a role in that characterization. And when prices change dramatically, so could/should your plan.

Question #4: “I know from your writings that you bought Amazon at a great price several years back, trimmed it back on the way up, and completely exited last year. With the shares moving sideways for a while now, are you looking for a re-entry point? If so, at what approximate level?”

Good memory. I wrote about paring back the position at around $1,425 and exited completed in Q2 2018 at $1,700. The stock peaked last year at $2,050 and has been marking time ever since, fetching mid $1,700’s these days.

While I would certainly buy it back if another good opportunity presented itself, I am not paying closer attention to that stock than any other. I am a big fan and customer of Amazon, but even as the stock has been moving sideways, I am not compelled to buy at current prices.

My strategy for valuing Amazon has always been to assume a certain profit margin and valuation once the company reaches maturity, which gives me a good idea of what price-to-sales ratio I feel is appropriate. As long as they are growing 20% annually and spending so much money, current year or even forward 12-month earnings seems like a tricky way to value the stock.

At current prices, AMZN trades for about 3.2 times 2019 revenue. That is about as high as the valuation has gotten in recent years and it seems rather rich to me. Put another way, if they can ever reach 10% net profit margins, would I be a willing investor at a 32x P/E ratio? Probably not. I might answer differently if they were earning 10% margins today, as 20% growth coupled with a 32x P/E seems like a more than reasonable price for a high growth company. But they are not earning much money even nowadays.

In fact, it looks like 2019 free cash flow, adjusted for stock based compensation (I know many of my readers hate that I deduct SBC from free cash flow to arrive at my view of AMZN’s underlying profitability, but I have no plans to abandon that calculation) will come in around $8 billion, or about 3% of sales. At today’s prices, that puts AMZN’s shares at more than 100 times free cash flow. No matter how much I like the company and the business, I cannot come to the conclusion that such a price is an attractive entry point. For comparative purposes, my purchases in 2014 were made at less than 2x sales.

Question #5: “How about a new stock idea, one that you have yet to write about? Breaking news!”

Okay, you win, I can’t resist.

EnLink Midstream (ENLC) is an energy pipeline company that has been crushed lately, falling from $11 to under $5 so far this year. Lower oil prices and less drilling activity from their customers has constrained cash flow growth and the dividend ($1.13 per year) now looks strained. The 23% current yield tells me that the market is going to force the company to cut the payout.

Investors realize this, but as recently as early November, the CEO stated that the board still believes the dividend is appropriately sized. Not surprisingly, investors are betting on a dividend cut and despite the fact that some people repeatedly insist that stocks should rally on such news, that is rarely true in the short term because plenty of people own stocks solely (and mistakenly in my view) because of a high dividend yield.

The end result here looks to me like the stock is being priced off a dividend cut and not the underlying business. Stocks should be valued on profits, not on the distribution of such cash flow. A dividend cut is warranted and ENLC almost certainly will cut it (absent a buyout offer from someone). While a cut will impact near-term price action, it does not change the value of the business.

To me, this appears to be a classic case of near-term market inefficiency. Investors are valuing the stock based on near-term events, not long-term earnings power. While there may be some more weakness immediately following a payout reduction, the company is likely materially undervalued unless the business itself gets significantly worse. As for what intrinsic value might be, I will leave that exercise to you.

Full disclosure: I am long ENLC personally and for my clients.

November 2019 Reader Mailbag - Part 1/2

Thank you to everyone who submitted questions for this blog's first ever "Reader Mailbag" post. This month I will answer 10 reader questions, split across two separate posts. If you would like to submit a question for the next mailbag series, you can leave a message in the comments or send a direct message via Twitter (@peridotcapital).

Alright, here we go...

Question #1: “Are we heading for a 2001-type correction for “revenue growth at all costs” companies that do not generate consistent EBITDA?”

For those who do not recall, or were not investing nearly 20 years ago, the internet bubble of the late 1990’s (peak in early 2000) resulted in the Nasdaq dropping 80% from peak to trough. The main culprit was simply a reversion to mean valuations, which for large tech companies had reached north of 100 times earnings. Many telecom related firms were booking losses as they tried to build out and sell network capacity, etc.

The good news is that the market today is not really being propped up at exorbitant valuations by the tech sector. Twenty years ago the P/E for the S&P 500 was north of 30x because tech comprised 30% of the index. Interestingly, today’s biggest tech companies, which make up a large portion of the S&P 500, are actually not the most overpriced. Think Apple, Microsoft, Google, etc. So I don’t see the tech sector bringing down the market all by itself.

On a more micro level, there are certainly certain pockets of tech that remind me a lot of 1999, namely cloud software stocks that fetch 10-20 times revenues and aren’t showing any profits. The valuations of these stocks look extended, though perhaps not “bubblish.” The good news is that selling software is not a flawed business model, in the sense that these companies could make money if they needed to. They would simply scale back sales and marketing expenses and stop hiring new employees. All of the sudden a 10 or 20% negative operating margin could become a positive number very quickly. Of course, revenue growth would slow if they opted for that route and the valuation multiple would contract.

More likely than a bubble popping, where software stocks fall 80% as a group within a matter of six months or a year (a la 2000-2001), I suspect these stocks will simply mark time and provide unimpressive returns for investors while the actual businesses catch up to the valuations. Consider a company that is growing 25% annually and trades for 10 times sales. Maybe a normalized valuation is really 5x sales. Sure, if the stock was cut in half overnight, the valuation issue would be solved, but more likely we will watch the stock flatline for 3 years while the business continues to grow at 25% per annum. After 3 years, that 10x sales multiple would be down to 5x as sales double and the stock remains the same.

This is not to say that none of these stocks will fall 50-75% or that none of them can keep going higher from here. What is a fairly safe assumption, however, is that on average, stock prices will rise more slowly than the underlying business, which will allow for valuations to mean revert to more sane levels.

Question 2: “What are your thoughts on long-term care cost preparation? Long term care insurance vs whole life with a long-term care rider?"

I have never seen a whole life insurance policy or annuity contract that I have liked for the customer. The problem with financial products that combine insurance with investments is that too many people need to get paid before the customer ever has a chance to make a good return on their investment. The salesperson needs to make their commission when the product is sold, the insurance company gets an annual fee for guaranteeing the payouts, and the investment manager gets their annual fee to manage the upfront and/or regular premiums coming in the door before claims are paid. By the time all three parties take their cut, the customer is typically left with meager scraps relative to what they should earn.

So, I am not a fan of whole life policies with LTC riders. Buying a straight LTC policy is generally a better move (fewer people are taking a cut), but those policies are not cheap, especially since many underwriters have mispriced them over the last 20 years and are now paying the price with an influx of claims.

I like to remind folks that you do not need to buy coverage that covers the entire monthly cost of LTC. After all, if you are forced into a facility, many of your current expenses are covered in part or in full, and in general you will have savings and assets to use to help fund part of the expense. So, if you are looking for coverage of $5K or $6K a month or more, and get sticker shock (even though oftentimes policies only pay for up to 3 years of care), take a close look at your budget and nest egg and figure out how much of that monthly cost you could actually cover yourself from reallocating living expenses and/or selling assets that would no longer be needed (cars, your home, etc). Many times people realize they only need to buy coverage for a portion of the expected LTC monthly cost, which is far more doable for one’s budget.

Question 3: "When should investors believe the hype and when should they not? What are some markers that show hype vs substance?"

Hype is a hard thing to quantify and analyze. I would distinguish between business hype and financial hype. The latter is easier to pinpoint because it is relatively easy to figure out if a valuation implies a future scenario that is impossible, or just a stretch. For instance, regardless of your view on the plant-based meat alternative sector, when BeyondMeat stock fetched a $15B equity valuation, there was absolutely no way to justify that, even if you took a very rosy scenario on the market size and BYND’s market share. A food company simply cannot justify a forward P/E of 700x or a forward price to sales ratio of 30x. With only 3% of the population identifying as vegetarian, there is no way BYND could be worth 50% of KraftHeinz.

Business hype is a lot harder, though, because a lot can evolve over 10 or 20 years. First, I think you need to understand the space somewhat before ever dipping your toe into a hyped-sector. Never simply take someone's opinion as being enough to convince you of something. If you know about a company or an industry and the idea seems reasonably promising to you, and other smart people you respect agree, then you can move on to the valuation question.

And for hyped, high growth, long-term businesses, the current valuation does not have to be super attractive, or in-line with the market. It just can't be absolutely untenable. There is a difference between buying a money-losing company like Beyond Meat for 30 times sales and buying a money-losing software firm for 10x sales. It is pretty much impossible to make money on a food company at 30x sales over a 5-year period because food stocks trade for somewhere between 0.5 and 2 times sales.

Finally, be on the lookout for companies that do one thing but claim they are special. WeWork was overhyped in part because they claimed to be a tech company, not a commercial landlord leasing out office space. Investors in Tesla today can’t think it is solely a car company, because it is worth more than General Motors. If Tesla is just a car company, the stock is setup to be a dud from here. If it is something more, like Amazon was more than just a book seller in hindsight, then maybe the stock can work over the next 5 years.

Overall, there is no magic thing to look for to identify overhyped stocks. If the valuation makes sense using optimistic BUT reasonable assumptions, and you know enough about the business to understand and believe that it has real promise, then you can begin to consider an investment. If not, I would be concerned there is more hype than underlying business and investment potential.

Question 4: "What do you think of Howard Hughes Corp (HHC) now that the strategic review is over and they failed to find a buyer?"

As I wrote back in June when the strategic review was announced, I thought the prudent move was to trim back my long position on the heels of the surge. What was most surprising to me about the end of the strategic review was that they were most interested in selling the entire company to a single party. Given the wide geographic footprint of HHC’s assets, finding a single buyer seemed unlikely. I was hoping they would be able to accomplish something more realistic, such as selling the Hawaii assets and/or the South Street Seaport. Focusing on MPCs in Maryland, Nevada, and Texas likely would have been welcomed by investors.

Instead we are left with a company that will simply sell off non-core assets, trim G&A (which was way too high), and perhaps implement a modest buyback. Is that scenario super exciting? Not exactly. While I don’t think the stock is excessively priced now (around $110), I do not believe the market will assign a market price anywhere near the purported NAV (between $150 and $200 per share if you ask the bulls). In order to get to such a valuation, you need to assign full value to land that will be sold and/or redeveloped far in the future, and I suspect public investors will continue to heavily discount those non-guaranteed projected future cash flows. If you focus on the assets that are leased today, or under construction, and discount the land holdings a bit, it is not hard to arrive at an NAV of $130-$140 per share, which is essentially where the stock was trading during the review process.

While I still like the HHC assets and the investment thesis, and will continue to hold some for the long-term, it does not strike me as a super compelling option for fresh money right now, as my upside base case has been tempered in recent years. The biggest disappointment has been the failure of the company to truly deliver on the idea that land and condo sales would fund operating asset development, making outside financing needs minimal. That business model would truly be unique in the real estate development sector and allow for outsized value creation, as most other firms are structured as REITs and have to borrow a lot of money for each and every project.

Unfortunately, HHC’s debt has been on the rise for years now. Consider the path of total debt: $700M in 2012, $1.5B in 2013, $2B in 2014, $2.4B in 2015, $2.7B in 2016, $2.9B in 2017, $3.2B in 2018, and $3.6B as of September 2019. In 7 years HHC has increased its debt load by 5.15x, while annual operating asset revenue has grown from $170M to $450M, or by 2.65x. That is not the kind of capital recycling that many, myself included, were hoping for when we initially bought shares. Unless that changes, it will be a tough task for HHC to close the gap to supposed NAV.

Question 5: "Are there any “busted IPOs” that have come down enough you are starting to get interested, even if they are money-losing right now?"

I have written a lot of negative stuff about money-losing tech companies that raise a bunch of money via IPOs, which will fund their loss-making businesses for a long time, and help them pay their employees more and more in stock (which also serves to limit cash burn). I did make a point to mention that I do not have a hard and fast “no loss-making companies in a portfolio” rule when I discussed the potential of Teladoc (TDOC) over the next decade.

Since stock prices should reflect the present value of future free cash flow, losses now are not always the end of the analysis. If I can find a dominant business, that I think will continue to grow and has the ability to make money a few years down the road, I will consider investing provided I am not paying too much for the privilege. So while that usually eliminates things fetching 15 or 20 times sales, other times you can find interesting situations that fetch reasonable prices.

Recently, I have been looking closely at Uber (UBER), as an example. The stock is trading around $26 after pricing the IPO at $45. In the near-term there are concerns about the lock-up expiration and insider selling, which could pressure the stock in the short term, but I don’t care too much about the short-term.

In Uber I see a dominant franchise with a sustainable business that is not just U.S. focused (like Lyft). They have an experienced CEO now, which should help them make the transition from start-up to large cap public company. And I think they have a lot of pricing power that has yet to be run through their business yet. A few extra dollars per ride is not likely to result in customers digging out their phone books and calling their local yellow cab franchise. Simply put, it appears that Uber is here to stay.

In terms of valuation, the current consensus for 2020 is revenue is north of $18B, versus the current market cap of $44B. Call me crazy given their current losses, but I don’t see a 2.5x price to sales ratio as being overly demanding. And they have $12B of cash in the bank to bridge the gap from now to profitability. If one were to assume a terminal P/E ratio of 20x, and work backwards to figure out what kind of margins they ultimately have to earn to make the stock a good value today, I don’t think the assumptions required are overly aggressive (though of course are far from assured). Now, obviously a company losing $1B of EBITDA a quarter comes with plenty of risks, but I would choose Uber at 2.5x sales over a cloud software company at 15x sales on most days of the week.

Reader Mailbag: Is Salesforce.com (CRM) a Good Short Candidate?

Tim writes:

"Hi Chad, you've probably looked at CRM as a "short," any chance we'll see a blog update with your thoughts on this one?"

Thanks for the question, Tim. I have several thoughts that pertain to Salesforce.com and other high-flying, excessively priced growth stocks in general.

Shorting these kinds of stocks is very dangerous. As a value investor, I certainly believe that excessive valuation is a huge red flag for any stock, but the key question is whether or not that sole factor alone is enough reason to bet on the price declining meaningfully, as opposed to simply avoiding it completely on either side. Unless there is a clearly identifiable deterioration in the company's fundamentals, I tend to avoid shorting stocks merely because they are extremely overvalued.

The problem is that the market tends to give high growth companies elevated valuations as long as they keep delivering results. As a result, the short trade can go against you for a while, making it such that you must time the trade very well, and market timing is tricky. It is quite possible you will lose money for a while, and even if you are eventually right about a price decline, most of your gains by that point might only really recoup the losses you sustained initially. Without a negative catalyst (a breakdown in the operating business) it is very hard to time valuation-based short trades well enough to make good money consistently.

Now, in the case of Salesforce.com (CRM), the stock trades at about 90 times 2011 earnings estimates. Even for a company that is well positioned to grow for many years to come, one could easily argue that even at an elevated price of 40 or 50 times earnings, there is plenty of room for downside here. And I would not disagree with that. It really is just a matter of whether you want to explicitly bet on a huge decline, because you not only need to be right about the price, but you need such a decline to begin relatively soon after you short the stock, because momentum names like CRM can keep rising for longer than most people think.

Unless the market in general has another huge meltdown, these situations typically result in the stocks moving sideways for a long time, in order to grow into the hefty valuation Wall Street has assigned to them, assuming that their business fundamentals are not deteriorating. While I do not follow CRM as closely as many others do, I am unaware of any reason to think their business is set to take a dive. If that thesis is correct and the company continues to grow nicely, I would feel more confident betting on the stock moving sideways even as rapid growth in their software business continues.

To illustrate this idea, let's consider past examples of stocks that were excessively priced, but still burned the shorts since the business fundamentals remained strong. Amazon.com (AMZN) is a prime example of a stock that many people have tried (unsuccessfully in most cases) to short in recent years. Amazon has continued to post phenomenal growth as it takes market share in most every category it expands into. In fact, just over the last few years many investors have argued it was a prime short candidate (and still do, at the current price of 52 times 2011 earnings estimates). As their business has continued to grow, Amazon shares have actually risen from around $70 two years ago to $165 per share today. Shorts over this period have gotten crushed.

If we go back in time, however, we can see that Amazon shares really have underperformed (relative to their underlying business fundamentals, anyway) for a long period of time. The stock peaked in December 1999 at $113 per share, when Amazon's annual revenue was a mere $1.6 billion. Today, more than 11 years later, Amazon's sales are on track for $45 billion annually, but the stock is only about 50% above 1999 levels. This is entirely due to the fact that the valuation in 1999 was so high that it already factored in years and years of stellar growth. Sales at Amazon have grown 28-fold (2,700%) since 1999, but the stock is up only 50% during that time. Believe it or not, that makes the investment a disappointment for those who had the foresight to predict Amazon's explosive growth potential a decade ago. The valuation simply mattered more because it was already factoring in tremendous growth opportunities. Perhaps the same situation may be brewing with Salesforce.com.

As a result, I would personally prefer to avoid CRM rather than short it today. In more cases than not, shorting a stock based on valuation alone can get dicey pretty quickly, whereas finding a company with deteriorating fundamentals AND a high valuation has a much better risk-reward profile. Think Crocs, circa 2008, as one example.

Where Does Buffalo Wild Wings Go From Here?

A reader named Hayward writes:"

Chad, how about a new update on BWLD now that it exploded to the upside."

No problem, Hayward.

Sports bar and grill chain Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD) is a stock I have been very bullish on for a long time. Hayward is referring to my post from eight months ago entitled A Wildly Bullish Quarter for Buffalo Wild Wings. The stock has since doubled to more than $42 per share.

The investment thesis was fairly simple back in October and nothing has changed on that end. This is still a popular concept restaurant with very strong growth prospects. BWLD has more than 400 locations with a large portion of them located in Ohio, the state where it was started years ago. With a long term target of 1,000 restaurants, there is enormous expansion potential and few barriers to get there.

The stock has had a huge run as the company trounced earnings estimates, which caused me to trim the position recently as it became a large holding and traded at 30 times next year's earnings. The stock is no longer cheap, but I still believe the stock will do well in coming years as they approach a national footprint.

I would suggest investors take some profits but still hold onto some of their stock. Since the store base can still more than double from here over the next five years, the stock should beat the market over that period, even if it isn't cheap anymore at this point in time. Right now Peridot is holding an average sized position in the name, whereas in prior months it was a larger position due to P/E multiple expansion potential (which has since occurred).

I hope that helps, Hayward. If anyone would like to suggest possible topics for future blog posts, feel free to let me know by using the blog's contact link at the top of the page.

Full Disclosure: Long shares of Buffalo Wild Wings at the time of writing