The Wall Street Journal - 26.11.2019

(Ann) #1

B12| Tuesday, November 26, 2019 ** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


Tiffany Accepts a Shinier Proposal


After raising its offer, the luxury giant behind Louis Vuitton will need time to polish the U.S. jeweler


HEARD

ON


THE


STREET

FINANCIAL ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY


China’s share of global exports peaked in 2015 at around 15%.

CAO YIMING/XINHUA/ZUMA PRESS

For online brokerage investors,
it is about the destination, not the
journey.
With the formal announcement
of its acquisition byCharles
Schwabat an implied valuation of
$26 billion via an all-share deal,
TD Ameritradeholders have
earned back the value lost when
Schwab announced a move to zero
trading commissions on Oct. 1.
That might seem frustrating at
first blush. Ameritrade was valued
at $30 billion as recently as April.
But given the price aggressiveness
of Schwab and Fidelity a fresh
start with a bigger, more diversi-
fied company is a good outcome.
Ameritrade’s share price fell 26%
on the day that the zero commis-
sion headlines hit.
It will take time for all the ben-
efits of getting together to flow
through. Schwab and Ameritrade
said they envisioned 10% to 15%
accretion, referring to a bump in
earnings per share. But this won’t
be fully realized until the third
year after the companies combine.
One reason is thatToronto-Do-
minion Bank, Ameritrade’s 43%
owner, will continue holding
Ameritrade customer cash for
some time. A potential boost to
the combined brokerage would
have been that cash moving into
Schwab’s bank, which earns a
higher net interest margin than
Ameritrade did in an arrangement
in which it sent cash over to TD
Bank. Ameritrade’s current ar-
rangement will remain in some
form until 2031. Schwab still needs
to pay Ameritrade’s fees for the
deposit arrangement, though TD
Bank will reduce the servicing fee.
Schwab will be able to start mov-
ing $10 billion of Ameritrade’s
roughly $110 billion in relevant cli-
ent money a year into its own
bank as soon as 2021.
Investors aren’t wrong to envi-
sion this deal, creating a brokerage
with $5.1 trillion in client assets
and 24.1 million accounts, generat-
ing even more value, but they need
to be patient.
—Telis Demos

Give This


Brokerage


Deal Time


To Work Out


Ameritrade-Schwab
pact has promise

ForeBay, selling StubHub may
prove to be the easy part.
The e-commerce company found
a buyer for the ticket reselling op-
eration it acquired back in 2007.
Viagogo Entertainment, a Swiss-
based ticket reseller, is paying
$4.05 billion for StubHub. That
marks a nice return for eBay con-
sidering the $310 million it spent
on the original purchase. It proba-
bly helped that the deal returns
StubHub to one of its original co-
founders who may have been in-
clined to overlook the flat growth
in third-quarter net transaction
revenue that eBay reported for
StubHub a month ago.
Those results helped trigger a
9% selloff from which eBay’s
shares have yet to fully recover.
But the stock is still up more than
26% for the year, largely on hope
sparked by Elliott Management
and Starboard Value. The Wall
Street Journal reported in January
that the activists separately took
positions in eBay and began agi-
tating for changes, including the
sale of the company’s StubHub and
classifieds businesses. The degree

of pressure became apparent two
months ago when eBay’s then-CEO
Devin Wenig stepped down, citing
conflicts with the company’s new
board that now includes represen-
tatives of both activists.
Scott Devitt of Stifel Nicolaus
noted Monday that the StubHub
price represents a 23% premium to
his estimated value of the busi-

ness. The real $4 billion question
is what eBay does from here. With
activists in place, a boost to buy-
backs seems inevitable. But eBay
already has been fairly generous in
this regard, as buybacks have ex-
ceeded free cash flow in four of
the last five years, according to
data from FactSet. Meanwhile, the
stock has only barely matched the
S&P 500’s gains over that time and
has languished compared with e-
commerce titanAmazon.com.
Selling StubHub will only make
the Amazon comparison tougher.
The ticket reseller accounted for
about 10% of eBay’s trailing 12-
month total revenue. The classi-
fieds business that is also on the
block makes up another 10%. What
remains is a marketplace business
generating a little under $9 billion
in annual revenue and barely
growing. Amazon’s online retail
business alone is on track to grow
15% this year to about $141 billion
in sales.
Selling off its other ventures
won’t be eBay’s ticket to a come-
back.
—Dan Gallagher

Share-price performance

Source: FactSet

500

–100

0

100

200

300

400

%

2015 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19

eBay

Amazon

S&P500

The real potential may be in the jeweler’s profit margins, but improving them will take years of work.

JASON ALDEN/BLOOMBERG NEWS

If an engagement ring should
cost three months of a suitor’s sal-
ary,LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis
Vuittonis paying slightly over the
odds forTiffany& Co. But inves-
tors are feeling indulgent toward a
stock that has risen 66% this year.
On Monday, the world’s largest
luxury company agreed to buy the
U.S. jeweler for $16.2 billion in
cash—a 12% increase on its offer
four weeks ago. Including Tiffany’s
net debt of $350 million and the
value of stock options, the all-in
price of $16.9 billion represents
16.3 times the target’s projected
earnings before interest, taxes, de-
preciation and amortization. On a
less conventional metric, LVMH is
paying 3½ months’ its own reve-
nue for the new bauble.
The profit multiple paid for Tif-
fany is roughly in line with what
LVMH handed over for Christian
Dior and luxury cashmere brand
Loro Piana in 2017 and 2013, re-
spectively. However, Tiffany is al-
ready a big brand, which will limit
opportunities to expand it further.
The real potential may be in the
jeweler’s profit margins, which are
low by LVMH’s standards, but
improving them will take years
of work.
The early focus will be on the
store network and pricing. Unusual
for a luxury brand, Tiffany makes
the majority of its sales to Chinese
consumers within mainland China
itself. It has less presence in Eu-
rope, a popular destination for
wealthy Chinese tourists, and may
be missing out on spending there.
Opening more stores in the region,
as well as lowering prices relative
to the U.S., should offset slowing

demand in Tiffany’s domestic mar-
ket, where the strong dollar has
hurt the spending power of over-
seas visitors. The brand will also
need to increase its marketing
budget, valued at 9% of revenue in
2018, if it is to compete with rivals
such as Cartier, which is owned by
LVMH’s Swiss rival Cie.Financière
Richemont.
On a positive note, Tiffany al-
ready makes most of its sales in its
own stores. That means there will
be no need to close wholesale ac-
counts, a costly process many lux-
ury brands have had to go through.
LVMH also is happy with the

spread of Tiffany’s prices, which
range from a few hundred dollars
for its silver products up to mil-
lions in the fine-jewelry category.
The deal gives LVMH a bigger
presence in the luxury-jewelry
market, where sales are currently
growing by 7% a year, according to
Bain estimates. As jewelry manu-
facturing requires lots of capital,
barriers to entry should remain
high, protecting Tiffany from
smaller challengers.
But investors will have to wait
while the brand is turned around.
Even if Tiffany improves its growth
rate to the jewelry-market average

and expands its operating margins
to 23% from their current level of
18%, LVMH may only make a re-
turn on its investment above its
weighted average cost of capital by
2025, according to RBC analysts.
As with previous deals, LVMH will
run Tiffany independently rather
than looking for the kind of cost
synergies that justify acquisition
premiums in other industries.
Still, investors don’t seem wor-
ried about the high price: LVMH
stock rose Monday. The two make
an attractive pair, even if they will
take time to really sparkle.
—Carol Ryan

Share-price performance since
Schwab commissions cut to zero

Source: FactSet

20

–30

–20

–10

0

10

%

Oct. Nov.

CharlesSchwab

TDAmeritrade

U.S. Won’t Win or Lose Trade War


China-U.S. tensions may not
matter for global trade as much as
investors seem to think.
Talk of a Sino-American trade
war has dominated newspaper
headlines, market reports and cor-
porate boardroom discussions for
the past 18 months. But, in some
ways, what the escalating tariffs
have shown most clearly is how
difficult it is for one country—
even one as central to the global
economy as the U.S.—to reorder
global trade on its own.
China was losing global export
market share before the trade war,
and it still is, at about the same
pace. U.S. global export market
share, after a long decline in the
early 2000s, stabilized at about 9%
in the early postcrisis years. When
President Trump began his tariff
scrap with China in early 2018, it
stood at 8.7% according to Interna-
tional Monetary Fund data. In the
second quarter of 2019, it was still
8.7%.
This apparent stability masks
big changes in individual bilateral
trade flows. In early 2018, for ex-
ample, the U.S. imported a lot
more from China than it does to-
day—but significantly less from
Mexico and Southeast Asia. China,
meanwhile, has taken a significant
hit from U.S. tariffs, but much of

this has been offset by rapidly ris-
ing exports to Southeast Asia and
Taiwan. China exported $19 billion
less to the U.S. in the third quarter
of 2019 than a year earlier, but
nearly $17 billion more to Europe
and East Asia. The overall knock to
Chinese exports was a tough but
not catastrophic $2 billion, accord-
ing to revised Chinese figures.
One thing this picture shows is
how difficult it is to hold China’s
feet to the fire on trade without

buy-in from allies. More funda-
mentally, it shows how dependent
trade flows are on things besides
tariffs, particularly exchange rates
and long-term factors such as de-
mographics and innovative capac-
ity. China’s share of global exports
peaked in 2015 at around 15% and
has fallen, in more or less a
straight line downward, since
then. It currently clocks in around
13%. The rest of the world exclud-
ing the U.S. has, over the same pe-

riod, gained about 3 percentage
points of the export pie.
It isn’t entirely clear what is
driving these trends, but part of it
is probably China losing competi-
tiveness at the low end of the
manufacturing value chain. The
nation’s working-age population
peaked in 2013, and a deteriorat-
ing environment for private capital
in recent years—due to a more
statist tilt under the current lead-
ership—has weighed on manufac-
turing investment.
At the same time, China’s weak
rule of law and inefficient financial
system still pose challenges to the
nation’s ambitions to move further
toward the technological frontier
in high-tech manufacturing.
Japan’s big currency depreciation
beginning in late 2012 may also
have played a role. That country’s
share of global exports, after de-
clining through the early 2000s,
has since stabilized.
It seems likely Sino-U.S. trade
tensions will persist. What deter-
mines the fate of China’s trading
empire may ultimately depend less
on that, though, than on the policy
choices it makes to deal with its
own structural economic problems.
The same, most likely, applies to
America as well.
—Nathaniel Taplin

Why eBay Is Stuck in the Cheap Seats
OVERHEARD

Thanksgiving just isn’t as good
as it used to be.
That statement doesn’t have to
do with the tone of political dis-
course around the table, the qual-
ity of the side dishes or even the
excitement-level of afternoon
football games. While it wasn’t
widely known when it was hap-
pening, the U.S. stock market
used to be very kind to in-
vestors during the one-and-
a-half trading days around
the holiday. (U.S. ex-
changes are closed
on Thursday and on
Friday afternoon.)
Then, back in
1987, the Stock
Trader’s Alma-
nac pointed
out that
owning the
S&P 500 in-
dex during the
Wednesday and
Friday surrounding
Thanksgiving was as

close to a surefire bet as one
could get, with 34 of 35 preceding
years producing a positive return.
As luck would have it, the
trend turned into a turkey the
very year that it was pointed out.
A nasty 2.5% cumulative decline
knocked the stuffing out of inves-
tors who felt history would re-
peat that year. Since then, the re-
turns from owning stocks
around Thanksgiving have
been positive on aver-
age, but less so—
and less consis-
tently.
As a conso-
lation, though,
the “Santa
Claus Rally”
into the end
of the year
has grown
stronger. At
least some
holiday tradi-
tions can be
counted on.

WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES

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