Why Online Fashion Retailers Are Worth Their Dizzying Valuations -- Heard on the Street
September 06 2016 - 7:24AM
Dow Jones News
By Stephen Wilmot
How to justify sky-high earnings multiples for online fashion
retailers? The old question has acquired a new urgency as business
for traditional clothing shops, most dramatically U.S. department
stores, has rapidly deteriorated.
The good news for investors looking to shift money into the
growing part of the market is that those eye-watering valuations
aren't as irrational as they seem.
Shares in Asos and Zalando, the European leaders in online
fashion, trade for 63 and 51 times forward earnings respectively,
according to FactSet. It can be hard to reconcile such multiples
with those of bricks-and-mortar retailers such as Macy's at 11
times.
The most obvious justification for these differences is in
growth rates. Asos and Zalando are both enjoying top-line growth of
roughly 25% a year, whereas Macy's is losing sales. But there's an
even more crucial consideration: To manage and maintain their
growth, Asos and Zalando need to invest continuously in management
systems, logistics and advertising. That means they make far lower
operating margins than traditional retailers.
A theoretical illustration: An investment in an online retailer
at 60 times next year's earnings would work out at 29 times
earnings after five years of 20% annual sales growth, assuming a
constant 3.5% earnings margin. That still sounds expensive. But
assume it then focuses on profitability, not growth, prompting a
doubling of the margin to 7%--the arguably conservative "terminal"
level used by analysts at RBC in their models--the multiple would
fall by half to a fairly normal-sounding 14.5 times.
This calculus explains why margins are just as closely
scrutinized as growth rates. Zalando's shares have jumped 30% since
management in mid-July forecast a margin of between 4% and 5.5%
this year--up from its previous guidance of 3% to 4.5%. Analysts
are particularly excited that the Berlin-based retailer made a
second-quarter margin of 13.9% in Germany, Austria and Switzerland,
its most mature markets. This is abnormally high, but the
four-quarter average of 9.4% is the kind of margin online retailers
could make if they didn't relentlessly recycle profit from
established markets to expand in areas.
The core uncertainty is that nobody knows what margin a mature
online retailer makes. The largest player, Amazon--which owns
Zappos, the company that inspired Zalando-- is still growing
furiously. At 3.3%, its operating margin for the last 12 months is
even lower than those of Asos or Zalando, which paradoxically helps
explain why its earnings multiple, at 86 times, is higher. The
other reason is that Amazon is the market-leader in a
winner-takes-all world.
Online-retail valuations aren't mad, but their dependence on
shifting mature-margin expectations makes them highly susceptible
to minor forecast tweaks. The resulting volatility is then
exaggerated by momentum traders.
This makes for a rocky ride for investors, but it also presents
an opportunity to build a long-term stake at a discount. The best
time to buy Asos or Zalando is when the market is worried about
profitability--as it regularly is. Zalando shares traded for 42
times forward earnings before July's bullish update. Don't be put
off by comparisons with old-fashioned chains: For an online
retailer, that is cheap.
Write to Stephen Wilmot at stephen.wilmot@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 06, 2016 08:09 ET (12:09 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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