Barnes & Noble: A Sale on BKS 5 comments
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The price war between Amazon (AMZN) and Wal-Mart (WMT) over best-selling books got a lot of press recently. It hasn't done Barnes & Noble (BKS) shares any good.
Never mind that Barnes & Noble is working closely with Wal-Mart and that best-sellers account for only 3 to 5 percent of BKS' sales. Conventional wisdom says that BKS is the second coming of dinosaur Blockbuster Video (BBI).
People don't read any more, right? And Barnes & Noble = Books.
The longer I'm in this business, the more I realize that most investors don't look beyond the headlines. Amazon good. Barnes & Noble bad. Simple, except the truth threatens this world-view.
Amazon has a sizable exposure to books too, yet it garners a ridiculous valuation. The case for going long BKS and short Amazon is effectively outlined in a recent Seeking Alpha article. Rather than reiterate the points of comparison, I'll focus on Barnes & Noble as a standalone investment.
Barnes & Noble is the premier brick and mortar retailer in a still fractured bookselling market. Borders (BGP) is overleveraged and struggling. Books-a-Million (BAMM) is in better shape, but is less than a tenth the size of BKS. In short, BKS has plenty of room to grow.
With 57 million shares outstanding and a recent price of $18.50 a share, the company has a market value of just $1 billion. This slight market cap results in a silly price-to-sales ratio of less than 0.20.
In recent years, Barnes & Noble has spent aggressively to upgrade its stores. Capex spending is now being throttled back and free cash is flowing. In fact, the company is expecting at least $100 million in reported free cash flow this year. Actual free cash flow should be much higher.
The company is budgeting $125 million in capital expenditures this fiscal year. Of that, $50 million is for new investments as opposed to maintenance. BKS is selling for 10 times free cash flow at most (and perhaps as little as 6 times).
The recent acquisition of Barnes & Noble College Booksellers should provide an added tailwind. In a slightly awkward (some might say incestuous) transaction, BKS bought College from the Riggio family, which also happens to run/control BKS with a stake of around 40%.
How's that for insider ownership?
Barnes & Noble paid $514 million for its corporate cousin. The transaction reunites the Barnes & Noble brand and adds an attractive, stable market for BKS. Before the deal, Barnes & Noble had annual sales of roughly $5 billion. College adds about $1.8 billion a year to the mix. So B&N College Booksellers represents about 25% of total company revenue. For this, BKS paid what appears to be a reasonable $514 million (or 5 times EBITDA).
Recall that all of Barnes & Noble (including the College acquisition) is valued by Mr. Market at only $1 billion. So College represents 25% of sales and 50% of the value? Something's wrong!
With their College proceeds, the Riggio family could conceivably take all of Barnes & Noble private. Their deal closed just weeks ago, but the market has already handed the Riggio's a gift. An aside: Leonard Riggio is the founder of Gamestop (GME) (a former BKS subsidiary). His recent sales of GME shares easily provide the extra cash needed for such a purchase.
Something is going to give. Barnes & Noble shares should trade above $30 a share.
Despite the "Booksellers" tag line on every store, Barnes & Noble is far more than a bookstore. They are a very capable retailer with a bright future.
If only the market realized it. Did I mention that BKS pays a healthy 5.5% dividend? Barnes & Noble deserves more than a cursory read.
Disclosure: The author owns shares of Barnes & Noble.
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