Herbalife: Value Pick Or Short Candidate?

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Source: Seeking Alpha

Date: Dec 29, 2012

 

Shares of Herbalife (HLF) are down 44% year over year due to questionable accounting practices, and a publicly announced short-attack by Bill Ackman. To sum up this already well-publicized story, shares of Herbalife first plunged in May when David Einhorn, of Greenlight Capital, questioned how Herbalife quantifies distributors, consumers and other clients. The SEC followed suit, and in mid-August questioned Herbalife about its disclosures on sales by distributors. A formal SEC investigation appears likely sometime in 2013. Noted hedge-fund manager Bill Ackman subsequently announced a massive negative bet on shares of HLF, calling the company a ‘pyramid scheme’. As with all pyramid schemes, Ackman believes Herbalife will implode under its own weight, and HLF shares will eventually go to 0 sometime in the near future. Herbalife plans to respond publicly to these short attacks on January 10th, 2012, and defend their business model.

Despite these strong headwinds, a number of hedge-fund managers have publicly announced they are taking long positions in the stock, because shares of HLF are presently undervalued according to their estimates. In the end, these diametrically opposing views cannot be reconciled, and someone is going to lose. And lose big.

Interestingly enough, no one seems to be debating whether or not Herbalife is actually a pyramid scheme or not. The investment community appears to have accepted this as fact. By contrast, the argument centers around whether or not Herbalife has created the first-ever ‘sustainable pyramid scheme‘ that will continue to drive growth into the future, and thus represents an excellent value pick going forward. In this article, I evaluate these two opposing views (value-stock vs. short-candidate) on Herbalife.

Herbalife as a value-stock

Using the Benjamin Graham criteria for value investing, Herbalife barely receives a passing grade (57%).

SALES: [PASS]
The investor must select companies of “adequate size”. This includes companies with annual sales greater than $340 million. HLF’s sales of $3,897.6 million, based on trailing 12 month sales, pass this test.

CURRENT RATIO: [FAIL]
The current ratio must be greater than or equal to 2. Companies that meet this criterion are typically financially secure and defensive. HLF’s current ratio of 1.39 fails the test.

LONG-TERM DEBT IN RELATION TO NET CURRENT ASSETS: [FAIL]
For industrial companies, long-term debt must not exceed net current assets (current assets minus current liabilities). Companies that do not meet this criterion lack the financial stability that this methodology likes to see. The long-term debt for HLF is $450.1 million, while the net current assets are $261.2 million. HLF fails this test.

LONG-TERM EPS GROWTH: [PASS]
Companies must increase their EPS by at least 30% over a ten-year period and EPS must not have been negative for any year within the last 5 years. Companies with this type of growth tend to be financially secure and have proven themselves over time. HLF’s EPS growth over that period of 482.4% passes the EPS growth test.

P/E RATIO: [PASS]
The Price/Earnings (P/E) ratio, based on the greater of the current PE or the PE using average earnings over the last 3 fiscal years, must be “moderate”, which this methodology states is not greater than 15. Stocks with moderate P/Es are more defensive by nature. HLF’s P/E of 7.06(using the current PE) passes this test.

PRICE/BOOK RATIO: [FAIL]
The Price/Book ratio must also be reasonable. That is, the Price/Book multiplied by P/E cannot be greater than 22. HLF’s Price/Book ratio is 7.96, while the P/E is 0HLF fails the Price/Book test.

Of these six criteria used in the Graham analysis, hedge-fund managers arguing for HLF as a value play have largely cited the stock’s low P/E ratio, and strong trailing 12 month sales. Even so, the company has considerable debt relative to current assets, and the short thesis directly attacks the company’s sustainability of sales going forward. Overall, the argument for HLF as a value pick at these levels is weak at best.

HLF as a short candidate

Bill Ackman has already laid out myriad reasons why he believes Herbalife is going to go down in flames, and hence the stock should be shorted (see link above). In fact, it’s one of the most impressive investor presentations I’ve ever seen, so there is little to add here. The question thus becomes, can Herbalife grow sales in a manner that does not trigger a massive implosion from within? A recent Seeking Alpha article noted that Herbalife’s true innovation for sustainability is its ability to grow geometrically, not exponentially. The problem with this argument is that the growth rate isn’t the underlying conundrum of pyramid schemes-it’s that they grow at all. Through any form of growth, direct-selling pyramid schemes begin to exhaust precious resources, namely their distributors, upon which the pyramid is built. Geometric versus exponential growth only determines the rate at which the resource is exhausted. At this point in time, heart-breaking testimonials from former Herbalife distributors are popping up all over the internet as a warning to would be distributors. One tasty excerpt from this collection that truly sums up Herbalife’s business model is the following: “Multiply the value of all of your assets by the value of all of your liabilities. Now double that figure. That is how much money you will owe when you file bankruptcy because you were a Herbalife distributor that swindled people into joining that organization.” This was a response to the question, “How much money do I need to give someone to sell Herbalife?”. With such negative sentiment growing among distributors, I see no way in which this model is sustainable. It is collapsing, and fast.

Conclusion

Herbalife’s stock is in deep trouble going forward, and does not represent a decent value pick. The company is unquestionably a pyramid scheme, and is rapidly exhausting its base of distributors through highly negative blogs popping up all over the internet. While the company may look undervalued from a P/E ratio perspective, I believe this is a false buying signal. The strong earnings of Herbalife will begin to dramatically sink once the pyramid scheme reaches critical mass, and implodes under its own weight. In my opinion, it’s time to hit the eject button if you are holding HLF, no matter what your losses are at this point. This stock is going much, much lower in 2013. In sum, HLF still represents an excellent short candidate, despite having already plunged more than 40% this year.

Additional disclosure: Research for this article was assisted by a Biotech Intern (YK) at Enhydris Private Equity, Inc.

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What Could Happen To The Home Builders’ Sector In 2013

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Canada’s Bank of Nova Scotia (NYSE:BNS) put out its 2013 market forecast at the beginning of December. Its analysts see the S&P 500 rising 10% in the coming year, double what Canadian investors should expect. The big reason for the outperformance south of the border according to the bank: “Attractive affordability and low inventories point to a sustained recovery in U.S. housing activity in 2013, a development that could solidify ‘Main Street’ confidence. A pick-up in housing data (starts, sales, prices) could represent the biggest threat to the bond bull market. Homebuilders and lumber companies should perform well.”

While it’s not a massive sample of analyst sentiment, I think you’ll find most of the professional opinion says pretty much the same thing. The housing recovery is real and gaining momentum. Forget the crystal ball. Here is my list of things that could definitely happen to the Home Builders sector in 2013.

 

Up, up and Away
Barron’s published an article June 11, 2012, almost halfway through the year, recommending investors get out of homebuilder stocks because the charts were showing a declining trend. As of June 11, the SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF (ARCA:XHB) was up almost 15%. Who could blame the technical analysts for thinking a reversal was in order? Funny thing about technical signals, they’re often wrong. Over the next six months the XHB gained another 30% through December 14. Investors who followed the advice of Barron’s have approximately $3,549 less in their portfolio based on a $10,000 investment at the end of 2011. As we move into 2013, will Barron’s have the nerve to double down and recommend investors once more take their money off the table. Not if they’re smart they won’t. This is a housing recovery that’s likely to take several years to truly run its course.
 

Homebuilder Confidence
As we begin another year it’s nice to know that homebuilder confidence is at a six-year high. The National Association of Homebuilders chairman Barry Rosenberg says, “Builders are reporting increased demand for new homes as inventories of foreclosed and distressed properties begin to shrink in markets across the country. Many potential buyers who were on the fence are now motivated to move forward with the purchase in order to take advantage of today’s favorable prices and interest rates.” One area investors might focus their attention in 2013 is in the Midwest where homebuilder confidence is strongest. Of all the large homebuilders, Pulte Group (NYSE:PHM) is your best bet as it does business in many of the Midwestern states.

SEE: Will Homebuilders Continue To Outperform?

Multi-Family Housing
The Demand Institute is a non-profit operated by the Conference Board in association with A.C. Nielsen. It produced a very interesting report in May 2012 about the housing recovery and what it would look like. The first point is that home prices will increase approximately 2.5% in 2013 and 2014 followed by increases of 3 to 3.5% in 2015 through 2017. Secondly, a big part of the recovery will be increased demand from buyers of rental properties. In previous housing recoveries, the primary demand came from buyers of homes for themselves. Therefore, in addition to investing in homebuilders, a big way to benefit from the recovery in 2013 is to own the individual stocks of multi-family real estate investment trusts (REITs) or exchange traded funds (ETFs) that own multi-family REITs. The iShares Residential REIT Capped ETF (ARCA:REZ) owns 34 stocks including Equity Residential (NYSE:EQR), the residential REIT headed by Chicago billionaire Sam Zell. One of 15 apartment REITs in the ETF, I’d be inclined to own the ETF in this instance. Whatever you decide to do, 2013 looks very promising.
 
Smaller Homes
According to the Demand Institute, the average size of a new home in 1980 was 1,700 square feet. By 2007, before the housing crisis kicked in, the average size ballooned to 2,500 square feet. Fortunately, saner heads appear to have prevailed as the average is slowly dropping. By 2015 it’s expected to be 2,150 square feet, about the same size of the average new home in 1995. Many of those buying smaller homes are people over the age of 50 who want less space and fewer hassles. Builders that cater to this market will also do well in 2013.SEE: How To Analyze Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

The Bottom Line
The real fly in the ointment for the housing industry is what a solution to the fiscal cliffwill mean for people’s pocketbooks. All bets are off for housing until a solution is announced. After that it’s full speed ahead. The year ahead looks good for homebuilders.At the time of writing, Will Ashworth did not own any shares in any company mentioned in this article

 

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Currency ETFs To Watch In 2013

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Commentary

Major trend changes took place in 2012, and the stage is set for 2013 to be another great year to be involved in currencies. Exchange traded funds (ETFs) provide an easy way to gain currency exposure, using a product similar to how you trade a stock. The British pound, euro, Swiss franc and Japanese yen all have actively traded currency ETFs, and right now there are important moves happening heading into 2013.

 

CurrencyShares British Pound Sterling Trust (ARCA:FXB)
 

 

The CurrencyShares British Pound Sterling Trust (ARCA:FXB) is on the verge of a potential upside breakout. Through 2012 the price has been capped at $161.35, and currently that level is being approached as the ETF has had a strong advance since the middle of November. The higher swing lows (marked by a rising trendline) gives the ETF an upward bias, but the move above $161.35 is required for confirmation. If the upward breakout occurs, the 2013 target is $170. On the other hand, if the ETF fails to break the key $161.35 level, and then declines below $158, more selling is likely to follow. The next support level is at $156, followed by $152 if the former is breached.

SEE: Technical Analysis: Support And Resistance

 

CurrencyShares Euro Trust (ARCA:FXE)
 

The CurrencyShares Euro Trust (ARCA:FXE) looks set to have a strong start to 2013. A major reversal occurred in 2012, as the ETF started to move higher in July after a 14 month downtrend. Based on the momentum of the current push higher, the ETF could reach $136 by early to mid-2013. The December rally above the August price high at $130.88 is a positive short-term signal for buyers. The primary support area is at $126, and if this uptrend is to continue that level shouldn’t be penetrated. If that level is broken, the longer-term downtrend is likely resuming.

SEE: Interpreting Support And Resistance Zones

 

CurrencyShares Swiss Franc Trust (ARCA:FXF)
 

CurrencyShares Swiss Franc Trust (ARCA:FXF): The euro and Swiss franc generally share a high correlation, therefore, the Swiss Franc ETF is under similar conditions as the euro ETF. Having fallen through the latter part of 2011 and early 2012, July marked a turning point higher for the Swiss franc. The current push higher likely has enough steam to test resistance in the $110 area, quite possibly in early 2013. If resistance is broken – $110.50 – a larger move into the $120 region becomes quite feasible. If the ETF can’t get through $110.50, and falls back below $104.75 caution is warranted on the long-side as the July-to-current uptrend line will have been broken.

 

CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (ARCA:FXY)
 

The CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (ARCA:FXY) has reversed to the downside in 2012, and that is likely to impact the pair into 2013. Since October the yen ETF has been in a decline, piercing through the March low and signaling a longer-term downtrend is likely under way. Selling could continue into the $115 to $114 region, at which point a short-term reversal (higher) becomes likely due to the steep slope of the decline. Two downward sloping trendlines drawn along the daily highs, starting in September, can be used to determine when a reversal higher may be occur. A rally above $119 signals a further rise toward the second trendline at $121. Overall, the trend is now down, so rallies will be selling points in 2013 … as long as the ETF stays below the September high of $127.36. A move above the September high is a bullish signal.

 

  The Bottom Line  

Currency ETFs provide a great way to participate in the currency markets, using a tool very similar to trading stocks. All four major currency ETFs are setting up to have big moves in 2013 and trends are already underway. If you are unfamiliar with ETFs or currency trading, do some research before investing so you understand your risks. Trade with a plan and make 2013 a prosperous year.


Charts courtesy of stockcharts.com

At the time of writing, Cory Mitchell did not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this article.

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