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Long eBay (EBAY US)
Thesis
eBay (EBAY US – market cap $61bn) is a company that is currently
cheap due to one-time events that
depressed the stock. The company generates a tremendous amount
of cash (8% FCF yield), management
is shareholder friendly, the 2 main businesses have large
economic moats and many channels to grow.
Multiple catalysts down the next 12-18 months can also quickly
increase the returns to investors. eBay is
currently trading at 18x EBIT. The combination of great
qualities in the business makes the stock a rare
find for its price. The underlying sustainable cash flow
generator with multiple levers for growth justifies a
higher multiple.
Business Description
eBay is an easily misunderstood business. There is a large
consumer facing side, or eBay.com, which
internally is known as Marketplace. To the rest of us, we know
it as the largest auction site in the world.
There are 2 more main divisions in the company, PayPal
(technically referred to as Payments) and
Enterprise. In 2009, CEO John Donahoe has embarked on a
turnaround to change eBay from a online
marketplace to a dominant player in mobile transactions and
eCommerce, and created eBay Inc. Most
investors today do not see past the fact that the eBay is no
longer eBay.com but really eBay Inc., a
different company from what many of us are used to.
Marketplace has defined for most of us what an online auction
site is. Most of us are familiar with the
business model of online auctions and “Buy-it-now”. Marketplace
currently has over 180mm active
members. 52% of eBay’s revenue comes from Marketplace and it
makes that revenue from the sellers on
the site. When someone goes to eBay and lists an item, he has
the choice to pay certain fees to increase
his selling page. Some of these could include having more
pictures, larger pictures, more descriptive
information etc. Once the item is listed and sold, eBay takes a
cut off the sale price. Different items will
cost the seller a different amount, for most products that are
not books or CDs etc., eBay will take a $0.30
fee. For books and CDs the fee is $0.05. On top of that flat
fee, eBay will take 10% of the selling price with
a ceiling of $250. Marketplace has steadily been doing 40% EBIT
margins for the past 5 years. That is in
stark contrast with the 0% EBIT Amazon currently has, mainly due
to the fact that Marketplace is not a
retailer and takes a fee from transactions.
PayPal is the payment service provided by eBay, and currently
represents 41% of revenues to the firm.
The company was known as Confinity and was founded by the
(currently known as PayPal gang) Peter
Thiel, Max Levchin, Luke Nosek and Ken Howery in 1999, before
Elon Musk bought it to merge with
X.com. In 2000, its name was changed to PayPal and the company
went public right after the market
crashed following the 9/11 tragedy. eBay promptly bought PayPal
for $1.5bn. PayPal provides users with
a secure way of paying each other, allowing for the first time,
individuals to accept payments from credit
cards. In order to have a PayPal account, one simply needed an
email address and a credit card. For every
transaction on PayPal, the company will take a 2.9% transaction
fee and that makes up the bulk of
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PayPal’s revenues, even till today. Depending on how a customer
funds his PayPal account, the cost for
PayPal will differ, largely due to having to pay out interchange
fees. PayPal has recently branched out to
an offline presence, which allows user to use PayPal’s app to
pay at traditional stores and reduce the
exposure to Mastercard and Visa, therefore starting on a path to
improving margins.
According to channel checks, 80% to 90% of PayPal’s transaction
cost are currently related to interchange
fees and around 90% of interchange fees are paid to Visa and
Mastercard. American Express, Discovery
make up most of the reminder. When someone uses a credit card to
fund his PayPal account for a
transaction, Visa/Mastercard will charge an interchange fee from
the acquiring bank, for PayPal’s case,
since PayPal is the “merchant”, PayPal will have to pay this
fee. Interchange fee calculation has various
simple formulas for various products but most of the time it is
a fee of $0.05 + 0.21% of sale. According to
data compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank, MasterCard has an
average fee of 1.49% and Visa has an
average of 1.33% in 2013. Paypal has been making 20% EBIT
margins over the last 5 years, with most of
the cost being interchange fees. The current drive to attempt to
turn consumers away from using credit
card funding accounts is likely to improve (if not at least
maintain) these margins.
Enterprise currently is 7% of revenue. This division provides
marketing, and omnIcahnnel operation
solutions to customers. Most of the customers are large
retailers such as Levi’s, GNC, Calvin Klein,
Aeropostale etc. Effectively, Enterprise runs the online
shopping sites of traditional retailers. Currently,
this does not play into any significant part of the valuation,
but it likely represents significant value if it
grows.
Why eBay stock is Cheap
eBay stock is cheap for multiple unusual reasons. Most value
screens will not bring it up since the stock is
trading at a 22x PE. On top of that, value investors flock away
from anything with a tech-ish slant to it,
eBay falls squarely in the zone of tech stocks where value
investors would miss. Growth investors on the
other hand, gravitate away from eBay due to favor for companies
better “growth prospects”. No
reputable growth fund wants to participate in a stock with top
line recently getting hit and whose stock
has not moved from 1Q 2013 (The market is up over 40% in the
meantime). Growth funds are not usually
a fan of stocks that are “dead money” through 2013 and 2014.
Said differently, regardless of whether you
belong to the “value” or “growth” school of investing, you will
likely look bad if you bought eBay and lost
money, and therefore you rather not give it a miss.
On top of falling into an unloved category for a stock, eBay
also experienced several corporate events that
no doubt chased away some investors. Below, I will lay out just
2 of the most significant issues
1. Google Panda 4.0
Google Panda is a search algorithm released in 2011. The update
was designed to improve on the
previous algorithm. Unsurprisingly, the algorithm itself is very
tightly guarded by Google and Search
Engine Optimizers (SEOs) have spent a heavy amount of resources
to understand this new code. What
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was quickly understood by SEOs was Panda’s preference for
content sites, articles and social media sites.
What was less understood was how Panda reacts to sites with
heavy search optimization. Before the
latest iteration of Panda, the Panda 4.0, it is widely believed
that hiring an SEO to help with website
design will improve one’s site rankings on a Google search. A
decade ago, SEOs will pull simple tricks such
as hiding key word text using the same color as the background
so the human eye misses it but the
Google Bot will catch it. As Google’s search algorithm became
more advanced, these SEOs tactics will
actually punish a website for “over-optimization”. The ongoing
game of cat and mouse has been going on
for over the last 10 years. My conversation with an SEO in New
York regarding the latest Panda 4.0
revealed that this new iteration was one of Google’s biggest
step-ups in the search algorithm. Not only
will Panda 4.0 identify quality content sites, but it will also
attempt to judge sites for the amount of SEO
participation. In other words, sites with heavy optimization and
designed to consistently hit top rankings
in a Google search will be normalized so that other websites
will stand a chance. For eBay, that meant
lower search rankings for many of their products. When Panda 4.0
was released in 2Q, it created fear in
the investor base. The heat of press reports that came out on
May 21st revealed that eBay’s rankings had
indeed declined on Google’s new Panda 4.0 algorithm
2. Security
If you have an active eBay account, you will notice that
sometime in May (21st to be specific), eBay asked
you to change your password due to a security breach commonly
known as Heartbleed. This bug exploits
a common vulnerability called buffer over-read where the
boundaries of what data can be read and
cannot be read by an external party are changed due to some
exploits. Simply put, Heartbleed steals
password information. Large websites (eBay, Amazon etc.) were
extremely quick in reacting to plug the
exploit and secure their data, however, eBay still asked all
members to change their passwords for
additional protection. This resulted in a degree of
inconvenience and mistrust in the use of eBay (and
eCommerce in general). For eBay, this meant there was a need to
increase marketing expense to bring
customers and sellers back to the website.
The back-to-back Heartbleed and Google Panda hit on eBay brought
stock down from $60 to sub-$50
levels in May.
Competitive Advantages
The sustainability of the Marketplace and PayPal business are
underappreciated. Marketplace relies
heavily on what is known as Powersellers – these are people (or
small businesses) that receive a high
rating and have sold sufficient products over a period of time
such that eBay endorses them with a special
tag to their name when they list an item. For the buyer, buying
from a Powerseller is often an additional
check on security. 4% of sellers make it to become a
Powerseller. The requirements to become and
maintain a Powerseller status is not only stringent, but
requires a heavy investment in time to become
one. The requirements are:
Be an active member for 90 days.
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Average a minimum of $1,000 in sales per month, for three
consecutive months.
Maintain a minimum of 4 average monthly listings for three
consecutive months.
Have an overall feedback rating of 100, of which 98% or more is
positive.
Have an account in good financial standing.
Uphold the eBay community values, including honesty, timeliness
and mutual respect
Comply with all eBay listing and marketplace policies.
In addition, there are 5 tiers of Powersellers. Increasing
monthly sales allows one to move up the status
tiers and the key advantage is obtaining different types of
support from eBay for free. Also, customers are
more trusting of a Powerseller of a higher tier than of a lower
one.
This means that eBay has a stickiness to sellers where the
switching cost for many of these sellers are
extremely high. Moving to another platform would mean them
losing the status of trust and support that
eBay has granted them and will significantly affect their sales
and operations. As for buyers, buying from a
site where payment is protected (by PayPal) and there are
thousands of reviews for the Powersellers
means buyers feel safer buying from eBay and these
Powersellers.
Around 70% of transactions of eBay are done over the PayPal
platform, which means that buyers do not
need to provide their credit card information to eBay and keep
it encrypted and secure with only PayPal.
A key advantage especially considering the air of distrust of
online retail after the Heartbleed bug.
An example of how the eCommerce industry has high switching cost
is manifested in eBay’s 2001
unsuccessful attempt to take on Yahoo! Japan. eBay attempted to
set up their platform in Japan when
Yahoo! Japan had previously established such a platform and
within a year, eBay learnt of the difficultly to
penetrate a market without the first mover advantage. They
subsequently withdrew their resources from
Japan.
PayPal
PayPal is arguably the first to enter the mobile payment
industry in 1998. Several players have attempted
to break into the industry but have been unsuccessful. Notably,
Google has attempted to create Google
Wallet but received very little traction. In order to understand
why, we have to notice that the so-called
network effects are unique for mobile payments. There are
effectively 2 types of payments someone
would make using a mobile platform, a payment to a person or a
payment to a corporation. A payment to
a person requires both people to be on the same platform, and
therefore represents high switching costs
to other platforms (e.g. Facebook). On the other hand, payments
to a corporation should be a many-to-
one system where the corporation (e.g. Starbucks) wants to be
able to accept payment regardless of the
platform. eBay has managed to capture both of these markets.
PayPal has been able to perform
individual-to-corporate payments for a long time, essentially
acting as a credit card. It now is running a
dual platform on the individual to individual payment system,
both using PayPal’s own platform and using
Venmo, a Braintree platform which was bought in 3Q13. The
current plan is to integrate Venmo and
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PayPal, the 2 largest p2p transaction platforms. One could even
argue that eBay bought Venmo not to
grow PayPal but to defend it. Most “network effects” are slogans
thrown out to attract venture capital
funding rounds. PayPal and Venmo together however, are probably
going to be one of the rare cases
where the network effect is realistically there. Based on a
Comscore report, PayPal represents has 72% of
all digital wallet transactions, a market that will grow to $1tn
by 2017. In the separate report by Forrester,
it is reported that mobile transactions are expected to hit
$90bn by 2017, a huge market for Venmo to
take advantage of. In the last year, PayPal managed to grow user
base by 19% to 143mm users and is
currently the largest mobile payment platform.
PayPal offers its users 2 main attributes, simplicity and
security. Anyone who has used PayPal can attest
to the simplicity of performing a transaction. From clicking on
the iconic PayPal icon to approving the
transaction usually does not take more than 2 clicks. Doing so
using a credit card requires typing in the
card number and filling out personal details for verification.
On top of that, PayPal is a trusted secure
payment website, and is significantly more secure than a
commercial shopping website.
eBay-PayPal Separation Analysis
Carl Icahn owns almost 1% of the stock and has publicly written
up a letter urging for the separation of
eBay and PayPal and publicly accussed Marc Andreessen and Scott
Cook from personally benefitting from
various eBay transactions, often at the expense of eBay. He
believes that a separation will allow both
businesses to grow and for shareholders to appreciate the value
in the company. Said differently, PayPal
deserves a higher multiple than eBay Inc. eBay, over the course
of a few months, went from publicly
decrying Icahn and issuing statements as to why Icahn’s
nominated board members are not fit for eBay’s
board to issuing a statement conceding that Icahn has a point.
Perhaps the most telling data point is how
the company is aggressively buying back stock using cash on
hand, a key point to be discussed below
under “Capital Allocation”.
While Icahn still believes that the best value creation is in
the spinoff of PayPal, he agrees that the current
board is in fact being shareholder friendly. eBay has said that
they are not looking for large acquisitions
(which is good in Silicon Valley since it is common to severely
overpay for very large acquisitions) and
management’s current capital allocation priorities are in buying
back its own stock.
I also noticed several interesting cultural significance in the
eBay PayPal relationship. eBay has 3
campuses, the South Campus which houses the team at Marketplace,
the North Campus which houses
PayPal and a small Orchard campus which houses some support
roles. The first thing an outsider to the
company will realize walking the grounds is how much nicer the
North Campus is than the South Campus.
The next interesting observation in North Campus is how eBay and
PayPal are in different buildings. For a
company that has been part of eBay for the past 13 years, it
seems weird that PayPals office is still
separate from the rest of eBay. Things become more interesting
when I start to realize that the culture in
PayPal and eBay are not only different, but almost to the point
where one group tries to exclude the
other. PayPal employees have name cards that are branded PayPal
and most corporate documentation
and corporate gifts are not shared between eBay and PayPal, even
the ID cards the employees have
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identify them by “eBay” or “PayPal”. When I asked some people if
they worked for eBay, I would often get
corrected that they work for PayPal, with one saying “not
really, I actually work for PayPal but eBay owns
our company”. From just a simple grounds tour, it seems that the
2 companies never truly integrated
together and separation for shareholder value creation is not
the craziest thought.
Capital Allocation
One reason value investors shun away from technology companies
is the lack of capital allocation
discipline in many Silicon Valley firms. Lots of firms are
acquisition friendly and have little concern in
protecting shareholder’s cash. eBay is different. Having
survived the tech bubble, 9/11 market crash, and
the recent 2008 recession, management has learnt a thing or two
about the detriments of poor capital
allocation and even their earnings transcript reads much more
like a Malone than a Zuckerberg.
1. Buyback
In June 2012, eBay begun to buy back their own shares with a
$2bn authorization with no expiration date
for the repurchase. Initially, it was not a means to return
capital to shareholders but was meant to offset
dilution from stock based compensation. In 2013, $1.3bn was
repurchased under this program. In Jan
2014, management decided to authorize $5bn of share repurchase
and has promised to aggressively
buyback stock. This round of repurchase was motivated by
management believing that good acquisitions
and investments are scarce and return of capital to shareholders
was favorable. That brings the total
repurchase approval to $5.6bn at the beginning of 2014.
It is also notable that there will be an additional 10m of
preferred shares issued this year. The dilution
effect of that on 1.3bn shares currently outstanding is likely
to be minimal, especially since eBay is buying
back potentially 85 to 100mm shares (depending on the price of
the buyback).
2. Debt issuance
eBay issued $3bn of debt in 2Q14, increasing its cash position.
That is in additional to the current $1.1bn
of debt averaging a cost of 2.4%.
The new debt issued are as follows:
$250m of 0.7% due 2015
$1bn of 1.35% due 2017
$1bn of 2.6% due 2022
$750m of 4% due 2042
The interest for the new debt comes up to 2.4%, the same as what
their current interest is. Despite this
issue happened at a period when 10-yr treasury yield was at a 3
year high (2.95%), eBay managed to issue
3x the amount of their current debt outstanding at the same
yield as before, a testament to their cash
generating ability. The total debt outstanding of $4.1bn is less
than the $5.6bn in buybacks to be
expected. Buying back undervalued shares at a debt cost of 2.4%
while still maintaining a net cash
position is certainly good capital allocation at work.
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3. Credit facility
eBay has a $2bn commercial paper program that is currently
untapped and a $3bn credit facility since
2011. Currently untapped with no management indication that they
plan to use the facility, the facility
provides a significant cushion to any short term volatility that
could happen in the markets and severely
reduces the risk from the bonds eBay sold. eBay is well
protected against credit events that could
severely harm the company.
4. Acquisition history
For technology firms to survive, they often have to acquire
other firms. However, overpaying or being too
willing to acquire would lead to painful write-downs and value
destruction. eBay so far has a good track
record at making purchases. Unsurprising, given the resume of
the 2 CEOs during the past 15 years (notes
on their resume at the end of the document). Here are some
example acquisitions.
In a widely publicized sale, eBay sold Skype at what appeared to
be a loss. It was initially released that
eBay bought Skype for $4.1bn but in reality, the price was
lower. eBay paid $2.6bn and $530m total in
earn outs for the 2 Skype founders. The total transaction value
was $3.1bn. After a disastrous attempt to
integrate Skype, eBay gave up and decided to sell. They first
sold 70% for $1.9bn to a consortium of
investors and the Skype founders and the remaining 30% was sold
to Microsoft for $2.5bn. In eBay’s
worst transaction to date, they made $1.4bn on a $4.1bn
investment. I understand I am being optimistic
by not accounting for cash burnt to integrate Skype, but taking
the business at face value. It represents a
5% CAGR. Their best ROI investment to date is PayPal, which was
bought for $1.5bn. Its current value is
likely between $30bn to $40bn. Additional details on PayPal
valuation will be in the later section,
“Valuation”
5. Offshore Cash
eBay has recently announced that it will repatriate its cash
offshore back to the US. This gives the
company an additional $6bn of cash in US but also incurs a $3bn
tax bill (30% cost). The cash is expected
to be used for small acquisitions or further buybacks. Many
technology companies are used to having
their cash stranded offshore but are unwilling to pay the
repatriation tax (the difference between US tax
and foreign jurisdiction tax) on the cash brought back. I
believe that the proper way to think about
whether the act of repatriation should be carried out is as a
typical corporate finance NPV exercise. The
tax bill is the cost of the exercise and the amount of net cash
obtained in the process is dry powder for
investing. If you can invest the cash to give a higher NPV than
the cost of the taxes, then you should
repatriate the cash. While some might point to how offshore cash
is usually invested in money market
funds, I believe that is not too material in low interest rate
environment.
eBay’s current acquisitions and stock both represent 20% or
higher ROIs. While I believe that the best use
of the cash is to buyback more stock as it is likely to be of
higher return than most investments, careful
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and defensive acquisitions (such as acquiring Venmo to prevent
market share erosion for PayPal) could
also represent reasonable investments for shareholders.
Growth
1. Marketplace growth dynamics
eCommerce is a concept that is fairly common in some countries
such as the US and UK but it is largely
seen as a new business plan in many less developed areas,
including South America and most of Asia
(Even in Hong Kong and Singapore, which are extremely developed
Asian cities, eCommerce is still in its
infancy)
According to a report by Americommerce, eCommerce is currently a
$220bn industry and is expected to
grow to $370 by 2017, or 20% per year growth. According to the
US Census, eCommerce is expected to
grow at 14% for the next few years, while eCommerce share of
commerce is expected to grow at 7% per
year. Using quarterly data, eBay SSS has been 20% over the last
3 years and 17.4% TTM. In contrast to
Amazon’s 24.8% SSS, eBay is really not that far behind the
“eCommerce behemoth” Amazon is today.
2. PayPal
PayPal is likely to be the prime business to grow in eBay and
several examples add color to that claim:
a. Management Shakeup
Paypal’s ex-President, David Marcus, left PayPal to lead
Facebook messenger (not Whatsapp),
a move widely seen in the industry as a step down. eBay’s
management has said that Marcus
was not fired despite multiple rumors that he is. Accordingly to
primary rumors, Marcus does
seem to have left on his own accord, but the reason he made that
choice appears to be at
the request of management. David Marcus had a small cult-like
following in PayPal but did
not receive high general approval in the company. His quirky
character (he would ring a giant
gong if he saw someone paying without using PayPal; he sent a
scathing email to all PayPal
employees berating some of them for not using PayPal) mixed with
his drive to create a
scatter of different products (as opposed to sticking to 1 plan
that will work), resulted in a
gradual loss of faith from both the senior management and junior
employees. Interestingly,
Marcus was one of the few top managers in eBay that came from a
startup background (his
startup Zong, was purchased by eBay as an add-on to PayPal).
Currently, PayPal does not have a president. The hiring of a
good manager that thinks in line
with management is likely to be highly beneficial for the
business. PayPal is arguably at a
point that so long as the manager does not destroy shareholder
value, and choose to act
more defensive than aggressively, the company is likely to
continue its market dominant
position.
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b. Marketing
PayPal historically do not have a marketing presence and a lot
of users started their first
PayPal accounts because they were eBay users. Most of the
benefits from using PayPal was
not advertised explicitly. Today, with the new PayPal app and a
concerted marketing effort, it
is reasonable to believe that the company can increase their
user base with appropriate
placement of advertisements. Previously, PayPal attempted to
draw in customers by
providing them free credit, incentivizing people to set up a
zombie account to reap the one-
time gain. Today, marketing efforts reflect a new mentality, one
where there is a prudence in
the use of cash and an understanding of better means to attach
people on to the platform.
Competition
The market eBay Marketplace operates in is highly competitive,
many brick and mortar stores are
beginning to create an online presence while there are multiple
online shopping websites that compete
with eBay for market share. The most significant competitor is
Amazon (AMZN US), while other more
niche websites such as Zappos, Gilt etc. also pose a threat. A
key difference between Amazon and eBay is
the source of revenue. eBay is a platform provider and
transaction facilitator, Amazon is an online
retailer. Amazon for all its efficiency and innovation, is
fundamentally is worse off business model and will
not be able to generate or sustain the margins (40% EBIT) eBay
can earn. Not only is Amazon’s business
highly labor intensive, it also competes almost solely on price.
On eBay, sellers are not always rational
sellers, some of them are more interested in selling a product
than for selling it at the best price (e.g.
someone who wants to get rid of furniture quickly in preparation
of new furniture coming in). When
prices on eBay’s site is reduced, eBay will still make a 40%
margin on that sale. For Amazon, running a 0%
EBIT margin means a decline in sale price is likely to
detrimental to margins.
PayPal’s competition landscape is currently scattered. Square
might be the closes competition but it is
still essentially a hardware producing company with a software
product while PayPal is a software
company that attempts to use currently available hardware.
Square is also a startup with a $5bn valuation
on paper and has been shunned by investment banks in 2014 when
the owners tried to market the
business for an IPO. However, operating in one of the hottest
spaces in technology has a key problem,
PayPal could be blind-sighted by a new and rapidly growing
start-up, very much like how Facebook blind-
sighted Friendster a decade ago. At the moment, the risk of that
occurring cannot be accurately
quantified but I am comfortable knowing that PayPal has a
dominant market share position in a network-
effect heavy industry.
Valuation
Comparables
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The key thing to note about comparables for eBay is that the use
of any traditional comps will make
eBay’s valuation astronomical, and likely inaccurate. Arguably,
the tech world is in experiencing frothy
valuations multiples are very high. Comping Marketplace to
Amazon’s 800x will create the world’s largest
company. Comping marketplace to even its own minority owned
company, MELI (60x earnings and 11x
sales) will still severely overvalue the business. Using MELI’s
multiples, Marketplace is worth $91bn, or
1.5x the total EV of eBay today.
For PayPal, the most obvious comp will be the (soon-to-be
public) Square, which received a $5bn
valuation when the private owners went on roadshow this year.
Square did $550mm of revenue in 2013
and a $5bn valuation in January puts that at 10x Sales. Giving
PayPal such a multiple will value PayPal at
$66bn, or more than the EV of eBay today.
It is not difficult to agree that a good business and a business
that can legitimately grow deserves a higher
(sometimes significantly higher) multiple than old, even
declining businesses. However, using comps to
value eBay will clearly be a mistake.
Absolute Valuation
Because of a lack of granular financial data relating to
Marketplace and PayPal, prudence and care have is
of utmost importance when considering the multiples to use for a
technology stock like eBay.
Some key points to reiterate when considering the valuation for
eBay are:
Management is shareholder friendly with a 10% buyback in place
and plans to be “aggressive”
The company generated $4.6bn of FCF in the last 12 months, or 8%
of EV
FCF has grown at 18% over the last 5 years
Industry for both mobile payments and ecommerce are expected to
grow at around 20% until 2017
eBay recently raised $3bn of debt at a negligible spread over
treasuries.
Carl Icahn is currently an activist in the position and has
managed to appoint someone to the 12
person board.
The firm is currently and has historically been in net cash
position. Net Cash stands at $2bn today
(pro-forma for new debt issued post 2Q)
The company currently trades at 9x 2015 EBITDA
Capitalization
Ticker EBAY US
Price $53.75
Shares Out. 1,241.2
Market Capitalization 66,715.2
- Cash & Short Term Inv estments 9,969.0
+ Total Debt 7,921.0
Net Cash 2,048.0
= Total Enterprise Value (TEV) 64,667.2
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eBay offers highly asymmetric risk-rewards. Using multiples for
seasoned companies for Marketplace and
PayPal, we get to a downside of (13%) before factoring the share
buyback. Considering that 10% of the
shares outstanding will be bought back, the buyback is likely to
net off part of this downside. The upside
can be tremendous. In the event of organic growth without using
heroic M&A multiples or comps, we
establish a very significant upside.
On top of the traditional valuation, there are several options
in eBay to for shareholders to realize value.
First is a spinoff of PayPal. Rumors in 2Q14 and 3Q14 are that
PayPal is likely to be spun-out in 2015. If
these rumors were to be true, we should see investors beginning
to value PayPal at a significantly higher
multiples given its dominant position in one of the fastest
growing industries.
Aside from that, eBay has also options to sell its stake in
several of the companies it owns, while many of
them are difficult for an external investor to value due to the
difficulty in breaking out their individual
financials, we do know that an IPO of Craigslist which eBay has
a 28% stake or continued earnings growth
in MercadoLibre, which eBay has a 18% stake, will lead to
increasing eBay’s cash position and reap
shareholders short term value. eBay also owns multiple domains,
and StubHub which could be spun out.
Other Notable Facts
1. Craigslist
eBay has a 28.4% stake in Craigslist. Because the company is
private, the latest observable revenue
figures are in 2012 when Craigslist was involved with a lawsuit
against eBay. The site made $130mm in
revenue and $100mm in profits in 2012 according to court
documents. Having under 30 employees and a
simple website, Craigslist has been running a thick margin since
inception. According to a call with
someone educated in that lawsuit, analysts have valued the firm
at $5bn. Currently, no sellside is
modelling in or considering this stake and I have yet to come
across a buyside report / conversation that
discusses this. In the latest 10K, eBay mentions in passing in a
section which includes all the domain
Valuation
EBIT Multiple
Low High Low High
Marketplace 35,185.5 70,371.0 10x 20x
PayPal 20,008.8 41,685.0 12x 25x
MELI 460.0 920.0 .5 mkt val mkt val
Craigslist 350.0 700.0 .5 mkt val mkt val
eBay Enterprise (300.0) 300.0 -1x sales 1x sales
Net Cash 2,048.0 2,048.0
Equity Value 57,752.3 116,024.0
Upside -13.4% 73.9%
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names they own that “we also own a non-controlling stake in
Craigslist”. While immaterial to the stock
now, Craigslist represents an optionality for upside.
2. MercadoLibre (MELI US)
MELI is no stranger to the long-short community, being a stock
that has been widely discussed, shared
and shorted during 1Q14 and subsequently bought by several other
funds since its collapse. Known as the
eBay of South America, MELI is 18.4% owned by eBay and based on
today’s market cap, implies that
eBay’s stake is worth $930m. Like the Craigslist position,
sellside and buyside are almost ignoring the fact
that eBay has this minority interest. More interestingly, we
note that MELI trades at a >60x earnings. A
quick visit to MELI’s website reveals a great amount of
resemblance to eBay’s site.
http://www.mercadolivre.com.br/
3. Bill Me Later
eBay provides a credit service to buyers called Bill Me Later.
It is effectively a system where the buyer of a
product can purchase something on credit. The company
facilitates the credit provision but passes on the
immediate risk to banks. Bill Me Later will then later purchase
the account receivable associated with the
loan made from these banks. The reason for that is offshore cash
management. Unlike other large
technology companies with cash offshore, eBay has an efficient
way of channeling it back into the
business, effectively funding a bank which chose to front a
customer purchase. Most of the credit in Bill
Me Later (59%) is provided by 1 bank. Silicon Valley based
financial analysts indicate that this bank is very
likely to be Wells Fargo. In addition, PayPal has started on a
similar program, working with WebBank to
finance working capital for sellers on eBay. Not only is this
another similar exercise in offshore cash
management, the process should increase the stickiness of
customers to both the eBay and PayPal
platform.
4. Baupost
Recently, Baupost, the fund run by Seth Klarman, declared in
their 13F that they own over $220mm of
eBay stock. Understanding that this would represent a small
(
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In the longer term, value can be eroded if management begins to
perform acquisitions many other
technology firms have been guilty of performing, by purchasing
companies at expensive valuations, or
worse, by doing so using eBay’s own undervalued stock.
Fortunately, we have not seen management
exercise such decisions. If large and expensive acquisitions are
announced, it would be wise to revisit the
thesis for an investment in eBay.
Recently, the CTO of eBay, Mark Carges, has sold stock in the
company worth $2m. Mark joined the
company in 2009 and has a total compensation package of over $4m
per year, most of it in restricted
stock. It is likely that he is selling stock for non-material
reasons. No other significant insider has sold
stock.
Selected Management History
eBay’s management is a mix of business minded corporate
executives, very unlike what most people
would expect of a tech firm. Significantly, the 2 CEOs the
company has had over the last 15 years would
have been comfortable on the board of almost any company.
1. Meg Whitman
Whitman is a familiar face to the business crowd. Often cited as
one of the most powerful women in
business and frequently talked about as one of the top CEOs in
America’s history, Whitman joined
eBay after graduating from Harvard Business School when it was a
startup with 30 people. In 10
years, Whitman grew it from a small startup to a firm that has
$8bn in revenue. She then handed the
baton over to John Donahoe. Under Whitman, eBay made multiple
acquisitions, with the 2 significant
acquisitions being PayPal and Skype.
2. John Donahoe
Donahoe was CEO of Bain & Co. before he joined eBay as CEO.
Donahoe spent the first 20 years of his
career in Bain (6 of which as CEO), and his early mentor was
none other than Mitt Romney. Donahoe
was internally promoted to CEO and has been, and likely is
still, close to members of Bain Capital. As
many firms in Silicon Valley focus on expanding market share and
growing revenues, Donahoe is
known internally as a big cost controller and efficiency driver.
There is an entire department in PayPal
that Donahoe has set up which investigates the best way to route
payments to make use of very small
discrepancies between interchange fees in different countries.
(When someone uses PayPal to make
a purchase, often that payment is routed through a series of
different countries based on an
algorithm in order to eke out a few basis points of margin for
that transaction). I understand that
Donahoe has a tremendous amount of support from his staff. He is
seen as highly intelligent, very
inspiring and personable (apparently he is at the gym 630am
every day and will talk to anyone if
approached).