Blue Nile: A Classic Underpromise, Overdeliver Company
In preparation for this article on Blue Nile, Inc. (NILE), you might wish to review some of my prior articles:
- Impressive First Quarter For Blue Nile;
- Not Paying Attention To The Blue Nile Bears;
- Blue Nile Bull And Bear Square Off; and
- Citigroup Upgrades Blue Nile; and
- Outstanding Second Quarter 2007 For Blue Nile.
To set the stage, I used Yahoo's financial website to pick up the analysts' estimates prior to the conference call.
| Financial Metric | Current Qtr Sep-07 | Next Qtr Dec-07 | Current Year Dec-07 | Next Year Dec-08 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Data Sources | Yahoo Finance 5 November 2007 | |||
| Revenue Estimates | 68.02M | 114.08M | 321.75M | 389.64M |
| Earnings Estimates | 0.16 | 0.44 | 1.02 | 1.29 |
I updated the table below to reflect actual values and company forward guidance.
| Financial Metric | Current Qtr Sep-07 | Next Qtr Dec-07 | Current Year Dec-07 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Data Sources | Company press release and conference call transcript | ||
| Revenue Estimates | 67.4M | 109M – 115M | 316M – 322M |
| Earnings Estimates | 0.18 | 0.40 – 0.45 | 1.00 – 1.05 |
As you review and compare the information above to my prior articles, you will note that guidance has gone up, again. Blue Nile is a classic underpromise, overdeliver company.
This most recent quarter's results are strong, indicative of a well managed and growing company. To be honest, with the housing and energy issues, I was unsure of the company's performance this quarter. The company's performance, however, indicates that it is doing well.
From the company's conference call transcript (courtesy of Seeking Alpha):
Analyst for Imran Khan - JP Morgan
A quick question just about holiday sales. Are you expecting non-engagement sales to trend, given the tightening economy? Have you seen any changes in competition domestically from people such as Amazon (AMZN) for the holiday season?
Diane Irvine
In terms of holiday trend, I think as we had mentioned in our comments earlier, as we have started the quarter we're seeing very strong momentum so that is great. I think in terms of consumer spending or what you see more broadly, I think we have always said we don't exactly know. I think there's a very strong argument that when you look at engagement, that is less discretionary. I can only point to what we're seeing, which is great strength in the business, even stronger at the beginning of Q4 I'd say than what we saw in Q3. Of course we are taking share, so I think we're a bit different than you see in retail broadly. But I think we feel very optimistic today in that we're well positioned for the holiday season.
In terms of competition, I would really just point to what Mark talked about earlier, that I feel every quarter we get ahead of the competition and really expand our lead. Mark mentioned our international business as being larger than any of the US competitors in terms of engagement online. I think we need to continue to get better and better at what we're doing, which is why we focus so heavily on the customer experience. I think you see that happening.
Similar to my prior article on Blue Nile's last quarter, rather than parsing through the conference call in detail, I am going to provide some quick snippets to give you a sense of how the company is performing.
- Net sales of $67.4 million, an increase of 26.5% over the third quarter of 2006;
- Gross profit grew by 28.4% to $13.4 million, and operating income grew by 67.3% to $3.6 million;
- Net income of $3.0 million and net income of $0.18 per share, representing an EPS growth of 63.6% over the same period last year;
- In Q3, total orders increased 16.3% as compared to a year ago.
- Average selling price per order was $2,093 in the third quarter, up 11% to $1,884 from the same period last year;
- Website traffic growth strong, stronger than it has been during the last couple of years; and
- Sales and merchandise priced above $25,000 grew by over 50%.
Similar to the last quarter's earnings release and conference call, I did not find anything any weaknesses or causes for concern. The company is performing extraordinarily well and is getting bigger and stronger with time. The key consideration is valuation, of course. Let us look at some quick numbers.
| Financial Metric | NILE | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Data Sources | Yahoo Finance, 7 November 2007 & Company Press Release | ||
| Market Cap. | $1.28B | ||
| Enterprise Value | $1.12B | ||
| Forward P/E (fye 31-Dec-08) | 62.7 | ||
| PEG Ratio (5 yr expected) | 3.21 | ||
| Enterprise Value/EBITDA (ttm) | 53.978 | ||
| Qtrly Revenue Growth (yoy) | 26.7% | ||
The values quoted above will be modified once the company's latest results are incorporated. You should keep in mind that in two to three months the forward P/E will be based upon 2009 earnings, not 2008. If we assume 25% growth in earnings for 2008 and 2009, then 2009 earnings will be about $1.60 per share. With the current price of about $80 per share, Blue Nile has about 50 multiple on forward earnings for a company that is growing at 25%. Because the company is still in the early phases of its growth, I think the valuation is very reasonable.
Note that my 25% growth value was arbitrary. The company exceeds 25% growth for many of its metrics. I chose 25% because it was a convenient number that was near the net sales growth this quarter. My guess is that the actual growth rate will be higher.
Blue Nile indicated that it is taking share away from other jewelry retailers. As mentioned in my prior Blue Nile earnings, I believe we are witnessing a transfer of value from the traditional retailers to Blue Nile and its customers. Thus, I am not fussed about the current forward P/E ratio because one, Blue Nile is performing exceedingly well operationally and two, Blue Nile is still a relatively young and relatively small company with plenty of potential growth ahead of it.
According to Yahoo and Short Squeeze, there are about 3.36 million shares short, which with a float of 11.25 million shares, means that about 22% – 30% of the shares outstanding are short. That translates into a short interest ratio of about 5 to 8 days. Remember, the short interest ratio is the number of days of average trading to equal the total outstanding short position. Both providers indicate that the number of shares short increased from the prior month's value of 3.46 million shares. While both providers' values are reasonably close to one another in our situation, I find it helpful to check both.
I continue to be an enthusiastic supporter of Blue Nile. Wednesday the S&P is down 1.88% to 1491.72, while NILE is up 9.31% to $81.63. Prior to the second quarter (not third), the price was near $83. The stock price has been volatile during the recent quarter with the price having reached slightly over $100 and falling back to low $70s before bouncing back Wednesday to the low $80s.
As stated in my first quarter summary, I do not have a target price for Blue Nile. I continue to monitor the stock. I believe the company is well managed and poised for even greater success. For those that are interested in investing in Blue Nile, I highly encourage you to read the conference call transcript to form your own independent assessment. My enthusiasm for the company and its stock are not a recommendation. You must perform you own independent analysis and make your own independent decisions.
Disclosure: I am long Blue Nile stock, short calls, for a net long position. Please note, I maintain a core long stock position and trade around Blue Nile using both stock and options.
Update
The market closed down Wednesday. The Dow fell 360.92 to 13,300.02, a loss of 2.64%; S&P fell 44.65 to 1,475.62, a loss of 2.94%; and Nasdaq fell 76.42 to 2,748.76, a loss of 2.70%. Blue Nile stock closed up $6.83 to $81.51, a gain of 9.15%.
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This article has 11 comments:
- rock boy
- 11 Comments
Nov 08 09:18 AMWhen they asked the CEO about the slowing order growth his response was he doesn't even think about orders just traffic. I don't think I've heard a CEO of a public Internet company utter those words since February 2000.
Net net, good company? Yes. Very good business model? Yes. Worth 63x next year's earnings? Not a chance.
- Stecyk
- 5 Comments
Nov 08 10:38 AMThank you for your comment.
I don't disagree with your 63x times 2008 earnings or about 50 times 2009 earnings, which was referenced in the article. If the company can continue to grow earnings at 25% at year for the next few years, then I have no concerns.
Again, they are taking share away from other jewelry retailers. They have no significant online competition. So my view is that the brick and mortar retailers will continue to decline in value and some of that value will go to Blue Nile. Most of the value, however, will go to consumers.
It will be interesting to watch how the company performs over the next several quarters.
Best regards,
Kevin
- coitus
- 3 Comments
Nov 08 08:18 PMMy other point is this, if the company can grow earnings 25% per year, what multiple do you assume the company will trade on 2010 earnings? Assuming they earn $1.05 in '07 and grow 25% per year then 2010 earnings will be $2.05. Let's assume they slow down to 20% growth after that. At a 1.5x PEG, the mutliple would be 30x. 30x $2.05 in earnings, you have a $61 stock. Congratulations, you've managed to lose $20 per share off of today's close over the next 3 years. To justify this multiple, you need to have hyper growth - 15% growth in orders isn't hyper growth.
- Stecyk
- 5 Comments
Nov 08 08:34 PMI am short ZLC and long NILE and have been since late March. You can check my posts on both stocks. I've done extraordinarily well with my paired trade. Thank you for your congratulations.
As for the future, let's wait and see. Something for you to consider is that Canada's economy is extremely strong economy and the U.K.'s economy is strong too. Do you think it is conceivable that the leading online jewelry retailer in all three countries could be worth $2-5 billion in five years? If so, I'll let you do the math on the share price.
- coitus
- 3 Comments
Nov 11 02:50 PM- Stecyk
- 5 Comments
Nov 11 03:57 PMWith regard to my $2-5 billion, while it is true that Zales value alone won't provide all the value, other jewelry retailers might. According to ZLC's last 10K (July 31), their revenue was $2.4 billion. That would seem to imply, at least to me, that jewelry is a highly fragmented market. So an effective online retail jewelry might sell that amount and much more in a short period. And remember, NILE is serving Europe too, not just North America.
I can almost see your reply now suggesting that the NILE's growth rates don't seem to support that assertion. After all, NILE, a small upstart, already has anticipated annual revenues of $320 million. My reply is that we are still in the early innings. We really don't know how well internet commerce will play out. I remain confident, however, that NILE's best days are ahead.
I recall when traditional bookstores were plentiful. I still remember going to specialty bookstores for specialty books. Now, I just use Amazon and my prior bookstores have disappeared. Poof, gone.
Will that happen to jewelry retailers? I don't think it will to the same extent. But I do think traditional retailers will need to adapt in order to survive.
I remain bullish and you remain bearish on NILE. That's what makes markets, no?
- borisb
- 339 Comments
Nov 13 08:07 PM- borisb
- 339 Comments
Nov 13 08:19 PM- BlueGalt
- 2 Comments
Nov 15 08:37 AMThe company made me just over 130% and I hope to participate in its next advance.
Great work.
- borisb
- 339 Comments
Nov 17 06:56 PM- borisb
- 339 Comments
Nov 18 08:30 PMMore by Kevin Stecyk