Option FanaticOptions, stock, futures, and system trading, backtesting, money management, and much more!

ETSY Stock Study (8-4-23)

I recently did a stock study on Etsy, Inc. (ETSY) with a closing price of $82.92. The previous study is here.

M* writes:

     > Etsy operates a top-10 e-commerce marketplace operator in the U.S.
     > and the U.K., with sizable operations in Germany, France, Australia,
     > and Canada. The firm dominates an interesting niche, connecting
     > buyers and sellers through its online market to exchange vintage
     > and craft goods. With $13.3 billion in 2022 consolidated gross
     > merchandise volume, the firm has cemented itself as one of the
     > largest players in a quickly growing space, generating revenue
     > from listing fees, commissions on sold items, advertising services,
     > payment processing, and shipping labels. As of the end of 2022, the
     > firm connected more than 95 million buyers and 7.5 million sellers
     > on its marketplace properties: Etsy, Reverb (musical equipment),
     > Elo7 (crafts in Brazil), and Depop (clothing resale).

This medium-size company has grown sales at an annualized rate of 40.8% over the past decade.

EPS is a bit more complicated. 2015 is the first year as a publicly-traded company. I am excluding negative/fractional EPS in ’13-’16 [otherwise resulting in an inflated growth rate] to start with $0.68/share in ’17. The company takes a goodwill impairment charge of $1.0 billion in ’22 due to Depop and Elo7 acquisitions. This slashes EPS from $4.61/share (“normalized” per CFRA) to -$5.48, which precludes future growth rate projections. Effective immediately, I am overwriting the data point rather than excluding it. I consider this to be fair especially because CFRA seems neutral (at best) on the stock. The result is a 57.9% EPS growth rate since ’17.

For ’17-’22, [sales and EPS] lines are mostly up and narrowing despite an EPS dip in ’18.

PTPM is above the industry but below peer averages while increasing from 7.3% in ’17 to 20.3% in ’21 with a last-5-year mean (excluding ’22) of 15.1%. ROE is above peer and industry averages while increasing from 23.8% in ’17 to 80.9% in ’22 with a last-5-year mean (excluding ’22) of 43.3%.

Debt-to-Capital has been above peer and industry averages since ’19 with a last-5-year mean of 76.5%. While the number exceeds 100% in ’22, Value Line (giving a B+ rating for Financial Strength) is not concerned:

     > Although debt represented over 100% of capital at the end of 2022,
     > cash and short-term investments totaled $1.2 billion and the
     > company has only modest debt due over the next five years.
     > Additional funds can be sourced from the company’s $200 million
     > undrawn revolver and $29.1 million in long-term investments that
     > can be liquidated on short notice.

M* gives a “Standard” rating for Capital Allocation and is not concerned about debt either:

     > With our forecast for just 0.8 times average net leverage over the next
     > five years (net debt/adjusted EBITDA), a paucity of near-term debt
     > maturities, and a highly cash generative mode… balance sheet risk
     > appears minimal for the marketplace operator. We believe that Etsy
     > should encounter no difficulties in funding its investments in headcount
     > and platform development with internally generated funds, while
     > retaining substantial flexibility to invest in brand marketing and
     > strategic acquisitions. With no principal maturities until 2026, we
     > view Etsy’s balance sheet health as strong, despite the firm carrying
     > $2.3 billion in gross debt as of the end of the first quarter of 2023.

Quick Ratio is 2.6 and—nota bene—M* rates the company “Wide” for Economic Moat.

With regard to sales growth:

I am forecasting below the range at 6.0% per year.

With regard to EPS growth:

How YF comes up with 144% for ’23 with ’22 being a negative number is [unknown to me and] a moot point.

I am forecasting below the long-term-estimate range (mean of six: 12.5%) at 6.0% per year. My initial value will be CFRA’s ’22 normalized EPS of $4.61/share.

My Forecast High P/E is 26.0. Since ’17, high P/E ranges from 32.1 in ’17 to 96.5 in ’19 with a last-5-year mean (’22 is NMF) of 89.1. The last-5-year-mean average P/E is 59.6. I am forecasting below the range.

My Forecast Low P/E is 14.0. Since ’17, low P/E ranges from 11.1 in ’20 to 52.3 in ’19 with a last-5-year mean (’22 is NMF) of 30.1. The 5-year median is 27.4 (’18). I am forecasting toward the bottom of the range [’20 and ’17 (13.8) are lower].

My Low Stock Price Forecast (LSPF) of $64.50 is default based on $4.61/share initial value. This is 22.2% less than the previous closing price, 19.8% less than the 52-week low, and 3.7% less than the ’22 low.

These inputs land ETSY in the BUY zone with a U/D ratio of 4.2. Total Annualized Return (TAR) is 14.1%.

PAR (using Forecast Average—not High—P/E) is 8.3%, which is less than I seek for a medium-size company. If a healthy margin of safety (MOS) anchors this study, then I can proceed based on TAR instead.

To assess MOS, I compare my inputs with those of Member Sentiment (MS). Based on only 60 studies over the past 90 days (my study and 20 outliers excluded), averages (lower of mean/median) for projected sales growth, EPS growth, Forecast High P/E, and Forecast Low P/E are 16.0%, 13.5%, 50.0, and 25.8, respectively. I am lower across the board. Value Line projects an average annual P/E of 35.0, which is lower than MS (37.9) and much higher than mine (20.0).

MS high / low EPS are $9.95 / -$5.40 vs. my $6.17 / $4.61 (per share). My high EPS is lower due to a lower growth rate. I think MS low EPS is unreasonably based on a one-time impairment charge. Furthermore, how are they calculating [percentage] projections off a negative base?

MS mean LSPF of -$10.50 is an invalid consequence of that negative base. The median of $35.00 is 45.7% less than mine.

Despite this apparent craziness, MS TAR of 39.3% is much higher than mine, which falls short of my 15.0% target.

MOS in the current study seems to be robust.

I track different valuation metrics. PEG is significantly overvalued at 5.5 per Zacks and 2.2 per my projected [forward] P/E. Relative Value [(current P/E) / 5-year-mean average P/E] is significantly undervalued at 0.30. Kim Butcher’s “quick and dirty DCF” prices the stock at 30.0 * [$5.75 – ($0.00 + $0.10)] = $169.50 thereby implying the stock to be 51.0% undervalued.

Despite being a BUY under $91/share, I would look to acquire shares under $85 to qualify TAR. The stock been quite volatile, which suggests likeliness to trade up and down and hit this level. It’s also there right now with last night’s close.

No comments posted.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *