Narrative driven valuation is a double-edged sword; SFN-related chatter led to a huge rally not so long ago, and now it puts SHOP in a penalty box.
Here's my notes.
2/ SHOP's GMV and topline momentum continues to sustain far longer than anyone perhaps assumed 3-5 years ago.
2021 take rates, my go-to metric to assess upside here, was the highest in the last 5 years; although very gradual improvement, it's a step in the right direction.
3/ "More than 14,000 merchants on Shopify Plus with approximately 4,000 of these coming on in 2021"
"In 2021, nearly 600 million shoppers made a purchase from Shopify merchant, up nearly 31%
from 2020."
4/ Four key investment themes in 2022:
Building buyer relationships
Going global
Going from first sale to full scale
Simplifying fulfilments
5/ "More merchants benefited from these features with a number of locations subscribing to Point of Sale Pro nearly doubling in Q4 2021 versus the same period in 2020."
TikTok shopping (Aug'21), and TikTok marketing channel (Oct'21) were introduced.
6/ "In Q4, more buyers use Shop Pay to check out on Facebook and Instagram with sales volume growing 4x
quarter-over-quarter for Shopify and non-Shopify merchants."
"GMV through Shop Pay installments more than doubled quarter-over-quarter as did the number of repeat buyers"
7/ More context about the deals with JD marketplace, and product updates such as Shopify Balance and Shopify Capital
8/ SFN related explanations
SFN was launched in mid'19 and initial outlook was $1 Bn cumulative capex over 5 yrs. So far, $117 mn is spent.
Now Shop has more clarity and insight. New capex plan: $1 Bn additional capex in 2023-24
Goal is to reach 2-day delivery for 90% US
9/ App developer partners grew earnings on Shopify by 76% to $411 million, and # of app developer partners that had an app used by merchants grew by nearly 1/3 over 2020.
10/ How SHOP decides what to build on their own vs relying on the 3rd party ecosystem:
"If merchants need something more -- if most of the merchants need something most of the times, it got to the core"
11/ "Payments penetration of GMV was 51% versus 47% in Q4 2020 and up 2 percentage points over Q3 2021."
12/ "planet Earth has not made enough engineers to deal with the rapid digitalization that we've gone through with COVID and so on."- @tobi
Here's some recent relevant data I dug in. If you're still in college, you may want to respond to what the world is telling you.
13/ Outlook
Expects topline to decelerate from '21.
Q1 is likely to face the highest headwind and Q4 likely to post highest YoY growth in 2022
14/ Valuation
As I mentioned recently, SHOP is finally getting to valuation where things get interesting. Not cheap, but interesting. If it's around ~$500, we can probably call it cheap. I'm adding, but trying to be patient as well in case it does come to $500.
"Market environment remains weak, with shipments below 2019 levels."
growth opportunities in industrial and automotive
Four revenue scenarios for 2026, with floor being $20 Bn. FYI, $TXN consensus estimates for '26 revenue is $20 Bn.
"I would be extremely disappointed if it ends up at $20 billion. That's not my expectation. That's not the signature I see as we compete for market share today."
I received a couple of DMs asking about "hey, what's going on in Bangladesh"
While I left Bangladesh in 2017, my almost entire family still lives there. So I'm keenly aware of what's going on. I'll briefly cover what happened and the implications.
let's start with the end result. The Prime Minister (PM) Sheikh Hasina or SH (who's the Head of State in Bangladesh) fled the country after facing intense protest from Bangladeshi students. Her exact location doesn't seem to be confirmed yet (rumored to be India or EU).
Let's back up a little and give some brief historical context.
SH came to power in 2008. Her father- Mujib was the architect in mobilizing people in Bangladesh to gain independence from Pakistan in 1971. Following independence, Mujib became the first PM of Bangladesh.
closed my $AMZN Jan 2025 $160 calls that I wrote. 43% gain in this trade, but feels like just another lucky trade as I now think AMZN is undervalued (and I was likely too cautious to hedge it at $160 back then). Kept the $55 calls unhedged now.
CSU's organic growth for recurring revenue will probably more or less mimic $BRO's organic growth. But CSU has ~20% ROIC vs BRO's ~10% but they trade at *almost* similar multiple. So I decided to buyback what I trimmed.
Going through insurance brokers earnings now. $AON and $MMC finally growing in tandem after AON lagged MMC consistently since 2Q'21.
$BRO is the clear winner in organic growth for this quarter. (disc: long $BRO and $AON)
Looking closer between MMC and AON.
will add to this thread later as I go through the transcript.
In the meantime, here's my Deep Dive on $BRO (also explains why I love this industry and would like to own probably most of these companies over time at "right" valuation):
After sequential revenue decline in China for 7 consecutive quarters, this quarter experienced ~15-20% growth across all segments in China. Europe and Japan are also in early phase of the upcycle.
More commentary on China:
"the market is more competitive in China, but we can compete and we can win business in very attractive margins"
expect incremental margin to be ~75-85% (ex depreciation)
"Inventory is being built at the right part, where we have this diversity and longevity positions such that we don't risk the scrap of the inventory."