Stock price when the opinion was issued
(A Top Pick October 17/13. Down 2.27%.) The concerns are really about international markets and luxury purchases. However, only 15% of their revenues come from outside of North America. There was also concern about inventory built ups. His sources say that Michael Kors is still very hot with 20-30 year-olds. At today’s prices, you are getting this at .75 PEG ratio. Reporting in a couple of weeks, and if earnings are still on track and the momentum is still there with sales, this is a pretty cheap stock.
The timing as to when this started falling out of bed had nothing to do with oil prices, but was in the early to mid-summer. This was one of those fantastic 5-6 year run stocks. An incredibly high multiple company for many years. However, coming into 2014, the multiple was in the 30s. Now back to an 18 multiple. Same-store sales growth abroad is rapid, so they are growing in Asia and other places at 30%-40%, but on a much smaller base. He just recently bought this. His view is that it is still going to grow at 20%-25% and the valuation is reasonable again.
*Short* Not a valuation call, but a call on retail, and one in particular. Even management has guided towards lower earnings, lower margins and lower revenue. Struggling from a retail perspective, and retail in general is struggling. Thinks retailers are attractive Shorts overall. (Analysts’ price target is $40.)
Continues to be a great name. Some of the weakness can be contributed to consumer discretionary names weakening a bit. There are also some current concerns on inventory build in the company. Currently trading at 17X forward earnings. With a 23% long term growth rate, that gives a PEG ratio of .7. Anything under 1 is quite good in this environment. Expanding their retail presence in North America with 400 stores expected. Only 20% of revenues are coming from outside North America.