Shopify’s 48% stock slump proves that it’s no Amazon

shopify’s-48%-stock-slump-proves-that-it’s-no-amazon

Amazon is only down less than one per cent

Author of the article:

Bloomberg News

Divya Balji

The Shopify Inc. headquarters in Ottawa. Photo by David Kawai/Bloomberg files Shopify Inc. has been called “Amazon Junior.” Those shoes are proving too big to fill.

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Both companies are seen as bellwethers for the e-commerce sector and they are index heavyweights, too: Shopify is 3.1 per cent of Canada’s benchmark stock index and Amazon.com Inc. is 3.7 per cent of the S&P 500.

Unfortunately for Shopify investors, that’s where the similarities end.

Shopify provides the software and other services that allow small businesses to sell on their own websites, an increasingly competitive business that skeptics say is becoming commoditized. Amazon is not only a mammoth online retailer in its own right and offers a marketplace for smaller businesses, but it also operates a fabulously profitable cloud-computing business.

That helps explain why Shopify has been routed this year along with many other high-multiple software stocks — falling 48 per cent, erasing about US$83 billion in market value. Amazon is down less than one per cent.

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“They are two different businesses,” said David Trainer, chief executive officer and founder of research firm New Constructs. “Even with the recent stock price decline, shares remain priced for Shopify to be bigger than Amazon. Shopify remains significantly overvalued.” Trainer has one of two sell ratings on it, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Both stocks received a huge lift when the pandemic hit in 2020 and consumers turned en masse to online shopping. But Shopify has given back most of those gains as investors take a closer look at the fundamentals.

The company’s growth, while still impressive, is slowing. In its last earnings report, Ottawa-based Shopify warned that sales growth will be lower in the first quarter of this year. For the year, analysts expect sales to increase 31 per cent, down from 57 per cent last year.

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Without a true cash-cow business like Amazon Web Services, Shopify’s profitability is modest and its valuation is sky high. The company’s enterprise value, which includes net debt, is more than 140 times estimated earnings, compared with less than 19 for Amazon.

More On This Topic Retail investors are ignoring something bond investors are telling markets Canadian stocks beat U.S. by most in 13 years and still have room to run FP Answers: What’s the most tax efficient way to draw down my $5-million investment portfolio? That’s not uncommon for a young company that’s growing, of course. But therein lies the problem for the stock: Software providers with rich valuations are one of the market’s most out-of-favor groups. It’s a combination of a retreat from high-valuation stocks because of rising interest rates, skittishness about companies that aren’t very profitable, and slowing growth rates after the pandemic pulled forward demand for some tech services.

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Article content Despite the brutal selloff, some Shopify bulls are undaunted.

“If you can look past the next couple of years, you see that there is still good secular growth at an expensive price,” said Jordan Stuart, client portfolio manager at Federated Hermes. “A lot of portfolio managers are looking at large cap indexes, saying I have that exposure, what else do I want to own? I’ve got to own something different and Shopify is going to provide that opportunity.”

Tech chart of the day Tech investors have been treated to a wild ride over the first three-plus months of the year. The Nasdaq 100 Index has closed higher or lower by at least one per cent on 73 per cent of trading days in 2022, which would be the highest percentage in two decades if the trend were to continue for the remainder of the year.

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Article content Top tech stories Chinese stocks listed in the U.S. rallied on Beijing’s plans to modify restrictions on the data that overseas-listed companies are allowed to share with foreign regulators, easing concerns that these companies could be kicked off American exchanges. Chinese fast-fashion e-commerce startup Shein is weighing a funding round at a valuation of about US$100 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. Indonesia’s GoTo will give away thousands of shares to each of 600,000 drivers as part of its US$1.1 billion initial public offering, setting a precedent for Southeast Asia’s sharing economy. Delivery Hero SE said it expected the entire company to hit a measure of profitability next year for the first time. French campaigners are successfully winning support in courts to block Amazon.com Inc.’s plans to construct distribution facilities in the country. FinAccel Pte, the parent company of fintech platform Kredivo, has acquired a majority stake in Indonesia’s PT Bank Bisnis Internasional TB, pitting itself against Southeast Asia’s biggest internet companies for a share of a growing digital banking arena.

Bloomberg.com

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