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How Peloton Became a Victim of Its Own Success

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empirefinancialresearch.com

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wtilson@exct.empirefinancialresearch.com

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Thu, Jun 8, 2023 08:34 PM

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Editor's note: For the next few days, we're handing over the reins to our colleague Dr. David Eifrig

Editor's note: For the next few days, we're handing over the reins to our colleague Dr. David Eifrig over at our corporate affiliate Stansberry Research. Doc's résumé is equal parts impressive and eclectic. He holds an MBA from Northwestern's Kellogg School, spent time on Wall Street working for Goldman Sachs and Chase Manhattan, then earned […] Not rendering correctly? View this e-mail as a web page [here](. [Empire Financial Daily] Editor's note: For the next few days, we're handing over the reins to our colleague Dr. David Eifrig over at our corporate affiliate Stansberry Research. Doc's résumé is equal parts impressive and eclectic. He holds an MBA from Northwestern's Kellogg School, spent time on Wall Street working for Goldman Sachs and Chase Manhattan, then earned his MD from the University of North Carolina, where he became a board-eligible eye surgeon. These days, Doc helps folks live a happier and healthier retirement. In this three-part series, he explains [why he's so bullish on health care as an investment right now](... --------------------------------------------------------------- How Peloton Became a Victim of Its Own Success By Dr. David Eifrig --------------------------------------------------------------- [The only money-making acronym you need to know for 2023]( Soon, the acronym "PVAB" could be as commonplace as "ASAP" or "TGIF." But if you don't know it yet, you're not too late... By the time it fully rolls out, PVAB will have a bigger lasting impact on our society than the Internet. That's why some of the biggest names in the business – from Bill Gates to Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk – are pumping billions into it. To see how you can get massive returns from what could well be the biggest investment opportunity of this year, [click here now](. --------------------------------------------------------------- Sometimes, success can destroy you... To see what I mean, consider the rise and fall of Peloton... Peloton Interactive (PTON) had a pretty good thing going. The company fostered an almost fanatical devotion in its customers – first, they'd spend $2,000 on its exercise bike, then they'd pay more for a subscription to interactive spin classes. The bike and classes may be expensive, but they're great. At least two members of our research team are fans. I personally ride two times a week and love Peloton's mini-bootcamp classes. And business was booming... until the pandemic happened. Then things went from booming to bonkers. Suddenly, Peloton was selling more than a billion dollars' worth of exercise equipment in a single quarter. Everyone was stuck at home, and a Peloton bike became one of the hot things to own. But Peloton wasn't ready... So the mistakes started happening. The company couldn't make its bikes fast enough. Shipments lagged. Customers complained that quality was falling and that repairs took months. And a new treadmill had a safety defect that killed a small child, forcing a costly recall to repair the units and taking the product off the market for several months. At the same time, management decided to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to ramp up production and logistics. When the pandemic lockdowns eased, the slowdown in sales became an absolute catastrophe. Peloton had thousands of unsold bikes, a weak balance sheet, and an investor base with no confidence in management. The company ousted its founding CEO, started laying off employees, discounted its bikes, and began looking for someone to buy it out. It's a far fall for a company that had convinced investors that it would go on to become the biggest name in global fitness... At one point, Peloton was valued at $48 billion based on about $3 billion in sales. Stodgy income investors like us love to point out silly valuations like 16 times sales. We trot them out like little trinkets we've collected at the flea market to show the absurdity that markets can reach. But let's really dig into what that valuation implies... --------------------------------------------------------------- Recommended Link: [Have you heard of 'SWaB'?]( More than 100 countries around the world are rolling out a system called "SWaB" that could have a bigger impact than the Internet in the days ahead. Here in the U.S., it's already being implemented in 38 states and counting. This year, massive investments are pouring into this innovation from some of the richest people in the world – like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Warren Buffett. Even the world's most powerful companies, like Apple, Microsoft, and Google, are spending billions to onboard it. That's because every single modern technology – 5G, artificial intelligence, blockchain technology, IoT, robotics, quantum computes, and EVs will have to switch over to SWaB to stay relevant. [Get the details here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- Stocks derive their valuation from their future cash flows – not the present... So what kind of future was Peloton's $48 billion valuation implying? First, we have to think of what Peloton would look like as a mature business, when it had stopped growing so fast and had reached a steady state of maybe 6% growth per year. A business like that would often be valued around 15 times earnings. Peloton is not and was never profitable... but maybe someday it could be. Let's be generous and say it could earn a 30% profit margin. Under these assumptions, for Peloton to grow into its $48 billion peak valuation, it would have to generate $16 billion in annual sales. There simply aren't enough people willing and able to buy that many bikes and subscriptions... no matter how hot Peloton's brand is. Even amid the pandemic lockdowns, Peloton's sales only reached $4 billion in its 2021 fiscal year – a quarter of that volume. Investors ignored all that. And it's because Peloton had a narrative. The story was not that Peloton would turn profitable and grow into its $48 billion valuation by selling stationary bicycles. Rather, Peloton would change the way we work out and capture the entire fitness market. After all, the company didn't just sell bikes – it sold subscriptions to live exercise classes. It was going to expand into other equipment, apparel, and in-person locations. It would create an entire new category of fitness industry. But it turns out Peloton couldn't even figure out its own inventory levels. Here's the thing that Peloton shareholders need to realize... The old narrative is never coming back. Right now, Peloton is valued at around $3 billion. In a year's time, it could be worth $5 billion... or perhaps $1 billion. We don't have a particular outlook and we're not making a specific call here. One thing is clear: It will never be worth $48 billion again. First, there's just the math of it... Peloton needs a rise of more than 1,000% to get back to a $48 billion market cap. That's not likely. But, more important, it's difficult to build a mystique around a company that convinces the market it can change the world. And it's a fragile existence. As you can see, a small tear in the story brings the whole thing down. And once you lose it... you can't get it back. No amount of success in Peloton's turnaround will bring back the glow of its prior glory. Selling more bikes and subscriptions, adding rowing machines to the product suite, or selling treadmills that don't injure people... these factors can help. They can lead to a rise in the stock. But none will turn Peloton back into the financial darling it once was. Regards, Dr. David Eifrig --------------------------------------------------------------- Editor's note: Prior to joining Stansberry Research, Doc's colleague Tom Carroll is one of the most respected health care analysts on Wall Street. Today, he's coming forward with a bold prediction: An upcoming FDA announcement as soon as June 26 could send a little-known health care stock to the moon. [Watch his brand-new broadcast right here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- If someone forwarded you this e-mail and you would like to be added to the Empire Financial Daily e-mail list to receive e-mails like this every weekday, simply [sign up here](. © 2023 Empire Financial Research. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution, in whole or in part, is prohibited without written permission from Empire Financial Research, 1125 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201 [www.empirefinancialresearch.com.]( You received this e-mail because you are subscribed to Empire Financial Daily. [Unsubscribe from all future e-mails](

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