Barron's - USA (2020-10-26)

(Antfer) #1

M4 BARRON’S October 26, 2020


EUROPEAN TRADER


I


t has been an exceptional year for


German meal-kit delivery firm


HelloFresh, which has seen de-


mand soar from locked-down con-


sumers desperate to add pep to their pan-


demic-hit evenings with exciting home-


cooked meals.


Shares in the Berlin-based consumer


stock have jumped 211% the past 12


months, and the stock (ticker: HFG.Ger-


many) is up 180% year to date compared


with a 3% drop in the DAX.


The firm, which sends subscribers


preportioned ingredients with a step-by-


step guide to create meals, has already


raised guidance four times this year, not-


ing that people are dining at home due to


Covid restrictions.


The stock could sate hungry investors


post-Covid as it increases capacity in its


main U.S. market, with new distribution


centers in Georgia and Texas that will


service its growing army of convenience-


and health-obsessed customers.


The meal-kit market is set to increase


15% in coming years, according to analysts


at private bank Metzler. This segment of


the global food market was worth $2.5


billion when HelloFresh floated on the


Frankfurt market in 2017. The entire


global food market is now worth 7.5 tril-


lion euros ($8.8 trillion).


Shares have reached an all-time high


of €55.20—and could have further to go,


with investment bank Berenberg predict-


ing a 17.7% increase to €65 along with


Metzler, and Deutsche Bank predicting a


target price of €63.


In an October note, Deutsche analyst


Nizla Naizer wrote that given the guid-


ance hikes, “one would assume that


HelloFresh has already incorporated the


increase in demand this year,” but she


thinks revenue could nearly double in


2020 and that there’s more growth


ahead. “Given the superior growth and


margin profile, HelloFresh should trade


at a premium to its e-commerce peers,”


she says. But shares trade at a discount


because the numbers give the illusion


that the company has a high churn of


users. Customers use the service for a


few weeks and end their subscriptions,


but crucially return some weeks later and


take out new subscriptions. It’s a bit like


visiting a favorite restaurant—customers


don’t go every night but are still loyal.


“We believe any material focus on the


typical ‘churn’ analysis is likely the result


of a misinterpretation of HelloFresh’s


business model, leading to an underesti-


mation of the company’s future growth


opportunities,” wrote Berenberg analyst


Robert Berg in a September note.


HelloFresh fetches 38.6 times this


year’s expected earnings and is valued at


a 50% discount to its peers. It has a mar-


ket value of €9.4 billion, employs 7,000


people, and operates in 14 countries in-


cluding the U.S., U.K., Germany, and


Australia. It delivered 280 million meals


in 2019 and had four million active cus-


tomers in the first and second quarters.


In March it posted a €25.8 million loss


for 2019, an improvement from the €82.8


million loss in 2018 as it invests in expan-


sion. Revenues for 2019 were €1.8 billion.


The business was founded in 2011.


Rivals Blue Apron and Plated formed


around the same time, and the race to


dominate the meal-kit space and disrupt


the traditional grocery market was on.


CEO Dominik Richter toldBarron’sin


a statement: “Pre-Covid, our consumers


were already cooking 50% of their din-


ners at home, a much higher share than


food delivery or restaurant visits.” He


says that percentage has risen since the


pandemic, and HelloFresh is improving


its products “to help all consumers find


exactly the meals they like to cook at any


given weekday.”


Profit margins are set to increase as


HelloFresh negotiates lower prices from


suppliers. Despite HelloFresh’s stellar rise,


there’s more for investors to chew on.B


By Rupert Steiner


EMERGING MARKETS


Time for Thailand


Stocks? Tread Lightly.


I


nvestors have paid scant attention to


the latest political turmoil in Thai-


land, where massive street protests


are demanding the government’s


resignation and curbs on a once-revered


monarchy.


That’s for good reason. From an Asian


tiger whose troubles shook world mar-


kets in 1998, the country of 70 million


has become a financial afterthought, ac-


counting for just 2% of global emerging


market indices.


“We own just one stock in Thailand,”


Siam Commercial Bank(ticker: SCB.


Thailand), says Rick Schmidt, emerging


markets portfolio manager at Harding


Loevner. “It’s very hard to find other at-


tractive companies.”


Thailand’s eclipse has come despite


adherence to globalist prescriptions. State


finances are in order, government debt to


gross domestic product was at a modest


40%-ish before Covid. The open economy


ran a whopping 8%-of-GDP current ac-


count surplus last year. Response to the


pandemic has been conscientious: Thai-


land slammed the door on tourists, who


numbered 40 million in 2019.


What ails the country is a selfish, mili-


tary-backed elite, which through a dizzy-


ing sequence of coups and power shifts


has consistently failed to share enough


wealth and opportunity with the larger


population. “Thailand is one of the most


unequal countries in the world,” says


Joshua Kurlantzick, senior fellow for


Southeast Asia at the Council for Foreign


Relations. “Twenty years of democratic


progress has been pushed back by the


military and the royalists.”


Inequality leaves Thais undereducated.


More than a third of the adult population


hasn’t finished primary school. So no


surprise that the country lacksexciting


innovative companies and became overly


dependent on tourism. Growth was lag-


ging well before the coronavirus, with


GDP expanding at 4% or less annually,


compared with about 5% for neighboring


Indonesia and 6% to 7% for the Philip-


pines.


The latest news from Bangkok is mildly


encouraging. Prime Minister Prayut


Chan-O-Cha, the ex-junta leader whose


election last year was “massaged” by mili-


tary colleagues, Kurlantzick says, offered


to lift a state of emergency “if there are no


more violent incidents.”


But King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who


has milked royal assets more aggressively


since ascending in 2016, has offered no


conciliatory gesture. The conflict is too


deep-seated for a quick fix, says Arthur


Budaghyan, chief emerging markets


strategist at BCA Research. “The ruling


elite’s fight against the poor people is not


going away,” he says. “That’s why the


Thai economy will underperform.”


A lot of gloom and doom is priced into


Thai equities. TheiShares MSCI Thai-


landexchange-traded fund (THD) has


lost 30% over the past year, while


broader emerging markets are up 9%.


And there are a few growth companies


on offer, likeBangkok Dusit Medical


Services(BDMS.Thailand), which was


riding a medical-tourism wave before the


pandemic. That spurs optimism in Nader


Naemi, head of dynamic markets at Aus-


tralia’s AMP Capital.


“If you believe there will be tourism


again, the share market has a lot of up-


side,” he says. Still, he is waiting for an-


other 8% decline before “technicals” sig-


nal that it’s time to buy.


The broader lesson from Thailand’s


travails is that economic orthodoxy isn’t


enough to maintain emerging market


stardom. Countries need mechanisms to


fight inequality and distribute the bene-


fits of growth through social protections


and education. The pandemic winners—


China, South Korea, Taiwan, and Viet-


nam—all check this box despite vastly


different political systems. It’s one more


thing Covid is teaching us.B


By Craig Mellow


HelloFresh Is a Stock for


Hungry Investors

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