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Why This Popular Tech Stock Is Down 50% Since October

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February 9, 2019 A publication from The Weekend Edition is pulled from the daily Stansberry Digest.

February 9, 2019 A publication from [Stansberry Research] [DailyWealth] The Weekend Edition is pulled from the daily Stansberry Digest. --------------------------------------------------------------- Why This Popular Tech Stock Is Down 50% Since October By Mike Barrett, analyst, Extreme Value --------------------------------------------------------------- For 300 years, a simple word problem had the world's most brilliant mathematicians stumped... The "division problem," as it was commonly called, took on many iterations between the 1300s and 1600s. In essence, it sought the answer to a question like this: If a game of chance between two or more players must end prematurely, what's the fairest way to divvy up the winnings? Niccolo Tartaglia, a famous 16th-century mathematician and pioneer in ballistics, wasn't sure the problem would ever be solved, proclaiming, "In whatever way the division is made, there will be cause for litigation." Three centuries of failed solutions all shared the same fatal flaw... They were focused on what had already happened to bring the game to its current state. In 1654, French mathematicians Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat finally discovered the solution... They did so by focusing not on how the game had already transpired, but rather on how the game might have continued had it not been interrupted in the first place. In other words, Pascal and de Fermat correctly shifted their mathematical analysis to the future – the number of rounds still needed to win to secure victory – rather than focusing on how many rounds had already been played. Today, the Frenchmen are widely heralded for discovering the theory of probability. "What is it that distinguishes the thousands of years of history from what we think of as modern times?" That's the provocative question author Peter L. Bernstein asks in his excellent book, Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk. After all, any student of history knows that many of the things we take for granted in our modern world have been, as he describes it, "at the service of human beings for millennia." In Bernstein's view, the answer to his question is the mastery of risk. By finally solving the game-of-chance question that had so confounded their predecessors, Pascal and de Fermat empowered people, for the first time in history, to make decisions and forecast the future using numbers. Their "intellectual dynamite" set off a chain reaction of risk-related innovations over the next century, including such things as life expectancy tables, marine insurance, and annuities. Virtually all of the tools we use today to analyze and manage decisions, choices, and risk were first developed between 1654 and 1760. You might be wondering why I am telling you this story today... When it comes to investing, few things are absolute. But one that will never change traces its roots back to the days of Pascal and de Fermat... The value of a business is the present value of all of its future free cash flows. Or, as the late economist Irving Fisher so eloquently summarized, "Capital value is income capitalized, and nothing else." In other words, to estimate current value, you have to look forward (like Pascal and de Fermat did), not backward to what has already happened. As Rupal Bhansali, chief investment officer at Ariel Investment, says, "Investing is ultimately about figuring out the unexpected, because the expected is already in the price." The valuation challenge facing every investor is clear... To earn market-beating returns, you must correctly anticipate changes in future cash flows that aren't currently reflected in the stock price. What if there was a way to precisely understand what expectations were already reflected in a stock at a given price? Knowing this would provide a much-needed value anchor that investors could use to imagine and measure alternative outcomes. Well, it turns out there is. Michael Mauboussin, one of the greatest investors of our time, co-authored a book about it in 2001, titled Expectations Investing. As Mauboussin explains in the beginning of the book, "Stock prices are the clearest and most reliable signal of the market's expectations about a company's future performance." Over the next 200 pages, he lays out a framework for deciphering what current prices say about the expectations for key valuation inputs (like revenue growth and free cash flow). Expectations investing helps you stack the odds of success in your favor. It does this by quantifying expectations in a way that the most commonly used valuation techniques – comparing multiples, like price-to-earnings ratios or EV/EBITDA ratios – can't come close to matching. --------------------------------------------------------------- Recommended Link: [Sign Up and Tune In: 2019 BULL vs. BEAR SUMMIT]( On February 13 (next Wednesday), a U.C. Berkeley mathematician and PhD will sit down with some of the world's top investment minds to discuss where stocks are headed in 2019. [Click here to sign up for this FREE live event](. --------------------------------------------------------------- Last summer, my colleague Dan Ferris and I decided to take a closer look at Starbucks (SBUX) for our Extreme Value service... Management had recently announced slower-than-expected same-store sales growth at the international coffee chain, and shares were down about 15% on the news. Using our own price-implied expectations model, we quickly concluded that investors were overreacting. At $52 per share, investors were forecasting zero revenue growth for the next few years. This made absolutely no sense to us. Though sales in existing stores were slowing, they were still growing. Additionally, the company had big plans to launch new stores across the U.S. and China (and had the capital to do it), thereby creating new sources of revenue. Where expectations investing really shines is helping quantify a margin of safety in a stock at its current share price. Ideally, we're looking for a situation where investors have given up (limiting our downside), but we're confident the business offers considerable upside without much having to go right. This was precisely the setup we saw in Starbucks last summer. After developing a sophisticated valuation model of the business, we concluded that even if we dramatically dialed back some of management's lofty growth expectations, the stock could rise 40% over the next two years. With shares already trading near three-year lows and the bar for growth expectations set low, Starbucks had limited downside and significant upside. As it turns out, Extreme Value readers taking our advice only had to wait a few months for the upside we saw to play out. In November, the company posted better-than-expected growth results and shares immediately surged 12%. Today, they're trading around $69... just a few percent away from where we expected shares to be trading within two or so years. It's important to note that seeing the upside in Starbucks shares last summer wouldn't have been obvious by looking at its price-to-earnings ratio, which was in line with the S&P 500. To really quantify the opportunity, we had to dig a lot deeper. So, what does expectations investing tell us about the market today? Each month, Dan and I evaluate dozens of new stock ideas, building expectations models for many of them. Lately, I'm finding expectations for revenue growth and/or profit margins generally remain high across the market, even after the big fourth-quarter sell-off. For example, let's take a closer look at chipmaker Nvidia (NVDA). The tech darling's shares have fallen about 50% from their October highs. (High-quality businesses that lose half their market cap in a matter of months are always worth a closer look.) As demand for its high-performance chips surged into 2018, so did investor expectations. The company consistently beat those expectations, and the stock consequently rose more than 1,100% from October 2015 to October 2018... Then, the growth story began to crack, financial results started underperforming expectations, and the share price tumbled. In the table below, you can see how revenue growth expectations are now back to where they were four years ago, in the mid-single digits... That's good news for value-oriented investors. You want to buy when expectations are low, provided you think the outlook for future growth is stronger. The biggest problem is that expectations for Nvidia's operating and free cash flow margins remain very high. This is a significant risk. When management recently pre-announced fourth-quarter results, it noted the adjusted gross margin would be below its previous guidance by about 6.5 percentage points. This means operating and free cash flow margins are also likely to decline significantly. But investors are still inclined to give Nvidia the benefit of the doubt. They've dialed back growth expectations, but they don't expect the slowdown to materially hurt profitability. For value investors seeking a measurable margin of safety, Nvidia doesn't appear to fit the bill, even though shares have pulled back lately. In his latest book, Mastering the Market Cycle, investing legend Howard Marks reminds readers that the odds of success change as we move across the investment cycle. Take another look at the chart above. Anyone who bought at the beginning of this particular cycle would still be sitting on a five-bagger today, even after the recent decline. Expectations were low, and the margin of safety and odds of success were high. But buying the stock later in the cycle, like back in October, when expectations were high and the odds of success were much lower, would have been disastrous. Situations where the odds of success are clearly stacked in your favor remain few and far between today. And as stocks have bounced higher from their late-2018 lows, expectations have, too. That doesn't mean stock prices can't continue to move even higher... But to do so, they'll have to beat already-high and rising expectations. So should you be bullish or bearish today? That's a question only you can answer. But luckily for you, our friends at our corporate affiliate TradeSmith are putting together an incredible event that will help you make sense of it all... Next Wednesday, February 13 at 8 p.m. Eastern time, they are hosting the 2019 Bull vs. Bear Summit. There, you'll hear from some of the most prominent bulls and bears in our industry, who are coming together for one night to reveal exactly what they think you should do with your money today. We'll even hear from some of Stansberry Research's top analysts, including Steve Sjuggerud and Dan Ferris. This event is completely free to attend. [Reserve your seat right here](. Good investing, Mike Barrett Editor's note: It's anyone's guess as to which way the markets will go from here... But that doesn't mean you have to be caught off-guard. To help you prepare for what's coming in 2019, our friends at TradeSmith are hosting their first-ever Bull vs. Bear Summit on Wednesday night at 8 p.m. Eastern time. [Sign up for this FREE online event right here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- [Tell us what you think of this content]( [We value our subscribers’ feedback. To help us improve your experience, we’d like to ask you a couple brief questions.]( [Click here to rate this email]( You have received this e-mail as part of your subscription to DailyWealth. If you no longer want to receive e-mails from DailyWealth [click here](. Published by Stansberry Research. You’re receiving this e-mail at {EMAIL}. Stansberry Research welcomes comments or suggestions at feedback@stansberryresearch.com. This address is for feedback only. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, call 888-261-2693 (U.S.) or 443-839-0986 (international) Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Eastern time. Or e-mail info@stansberrycustomerservice.com. Please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized investment advice. © 2019 Stansberry Research. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution, in whole or in part, is prohibited without written permission from Stansberry Research, 1125 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD 21201 or [www.stansberryresearch.com](. Any brokers mentioned constitute a partial list of available brokers and is for your information only. Stansberry Research does not recommend or endorse any brokers, dealers, or investment advisors. Stansberry Research forbids its writers from having a financial interest in any security they recommend to our subscribers. All employees of Stansberry Research (and affiliated companies) must wait 24 hours after an investment recommendation is published online – or 72 hours after a direct mail publication is sent – before acting on that recommendation. This work is based on SEC filings, current events, interviews, corporate press releases, and what we've learned as financial journalists. It may contain errors, and you shouldn't make any investment decision based solely on what you read here. It's your money and your responsibility.

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