Showing posts with label MELI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MELI. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

sell economics, buy MELI

The year 2008 will surely go down as the one in which Economists were proved to be the dumbasses that many of us suspected they were for many years. The more you ask their collective opinions these days, the more ridiculous they seem. Below is an example from Brazil. Surely 26 out of 27 economists can't be wrong........

So read this and think about how cheap MELI is these days. They don't sell many cars, either.

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By Jeb Blount and Katia Cortes Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil’s retail sales rose more than expected by economists in October, indicating that consumer demand in Latin America’s biggest economy is holding up against the global credit crunch.

Sales surged 10.1 percent in October from a year ago, led up by a 44 percent climb in computer sales, the national statistics agency said. The increase exceeded the forecasts of 26 of 27 economists in a Bloomberg survey and was higher than the 9.3 percent sales growth yada yada continues here

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

MELI has a great quarter and reports on the wrong day

Or maybe that should read 'wrong year'.

Mercado Libre (MELI) blew away even the most optimistic of calls on its 3q08 earnings and returned a 13c EPS. Sales revenues of U$40.3m were also top notch. These are really good numbers and unsurprisingly MELI jumped bigtime at the bell, touching $13. However the broad market selloff has taken a lot of the shine off today's pop and right now it sits up "only" 13.5% at $11.70 or so.

As for me, well I know I'm fated to get this stock wrong 100% of the time. I sold nearly a buck lower yesterday after chickening out, even though I like the fundamentals of the stock and in this post called it a buy at $20 with charts and everything (in my own defence that was before the whole of the stock market dumped bigtime, but a call is a call). The worst of it was that I even called 3q08 EPS at 10c in that post, and the big beat yesterday should have me buying this stock again. But i think it's best left alone...I might get the big picture on MELI, but my mojo just doesn't work for trading it.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Mercado Libre (MELI) is offline...probably not good for business, all things considered

Geddit?

Word reaches slow-off-the-mark Otto that Mercado Libre (MELI) has had an enormous glitch in its operational software for the last three days and the whole site is down. MELI has some kind of "we're doing maintenance work" BS notice up but according to unofficial mails sent out from inside the company the shitstorm is due to head office making a mess of incorporating clients from the recently bought deremate dot com.

From here MELI has two choices:

1) Get the problem sorted out quickly. Three days is far too long already.

2) Pay severe consequences.

As I said just yesterday, the stock is cheap right now but it's not the perfect company. Case in point. Thanks to reader FC for waking me up to this one. I should have known about this earlier, really.......

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Mercado Libre (MELI): likeable at U$20

"Common sense will tell you that the only time you can get something for a small fraction of what it's worth is when other people are despondently selling. So it's been a new theory of mine, the theory of maximum pessimism. If you want to succeed in selecting investments, look for the points of maximum pessimism."

Sir John Templeton, investor and philanthropist. Born November 29, 1912. Died July 8, 2008, aged 95


Back in the period March to May this year, this blogger took Mercado Libre (MELI) to task for being overvalued on several occasions. The permabull cheerleader brigade proceeded to pull the analysis to bits and "prove" Otto was talking crap, even when I pointed out the heavy insider selling that was going on. The stock stood at between $40 and $60 at the time of the unwarranted attacks, and here we are with MELI under $20; that's called "proof of the pudding", people (as people close to me know, I'm quite insufferable when I'm right). On the other hand, I did fail to trade the stock very well even though the global call was correct. This is far more typical of me than the recent successful ST foray into SLV*, as I'm much better at LT views than trading. So be it.

Ok, mucho blah blah blah...the point of today's post is to revisit and examine if MELI now offers value. First up, let's look at how revenues have evolved in the last two years (click any chart to enlarge, by the way):

Obviously, top line growth is healthy enough. In fact it's never been a problem, even when the stock was priced way above its station. Next here's a chart that maps EPS since 3q06 to date, and adds in my own forecast for EPS in the two quarters left to report this year.

As you can see, bottom line profits growth is just fine. So here's a chart that maps out actual and forecast trailing P/E ratio at MELI for 2008 and 2009 (according to my casio and finger in the air, anyway).


With P/E projected at 20X trailing for the end of next year, no long term debt at the company, plenty of growth, no big overheads and a market share that's as close to a monopoly in the region as possible it certainly looks interesting at these levels. It's also worth pointing out that its main revenue market, Brazil, is experiencing ongoing strength in its retail sales sector and continues to ignore the machinations of its own stock market. Whether such strength continues in the next four quarters is debatable, of course, but Brazil isn't slipping into recession this time around, no way José.

All in all, I think MELI is a worthy buy at present levels. Speculative, of course, and if you jump on board be prepared for the normal high beta swings that you have to expect from a tech/retail growth stock based in emerging markets. However I'd call reward as clearly outweighing risk right now. Perhaps the best policy is wait until the US house rescue package thingy gets resolved and miss out on the first 10% of a targeted 50% upmove. So buy between $20 and $22 and ring that register at $30. DYODD though, yeah? We're all big boys and girls here.


Related Posts
Mercado Libre (MELI). Hype is no help
Mercado Libre (MELI): Nice to know the CEO agrees with me
Mercado Libre (MELI): Reality Bites


*SLV opened at $12.20 today, so I didn't buy. I still want under $12