Motley Fool Money - Betting on Zero
Episode Date: March 31, 2017Blackberry surprises. Dave & Buster's rises. Facebook shares a new story. And Lululemon tumbles. Plus, Betting on Zero documentary filmmaker Ted Braun talks about one hedge fund manager's billion doll...ar bet against Herbalife. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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From Fool Global Headquarters, this is Motley Fool Money.
It's the Motley Fool Money Radio Show. I'm Chris Helen, joining me in studio this week for a million-dollar portfolio, Jason Moser, from Motley Fool Explorer, Simon Erickson, and from Motley Fool Pro and Options, Jeff Fisher. Good to see, as always, as always, as we're seeing, as always, as always, we'll see you as always,
we'll give you an inside look at the stocks on our radar. But we begin with a surprising comeback. Shares of Blackberry. Yes, gentlemen, Blackberry, up 13% on Friday.
After fourth quarter profits came in higher than expected, the company that once had 40% market
chair on smartphones is attempting to remake itself as a software and services company.
Jeff Fisher, how's it going?
It's going better than you might expect.
I expected zero, so it is going better than I expect.
And the company is probably going to pull it off.
They have more than a billion in that cash, so they're sitting pretty in that regard.
They have now just more than a billion in revenue.
And I will point out, that compares to 20 billion in revenue in 2011.
So quite a dissent there.
And yet it's profitable.
And they're focused.
You know, Chris, what was Blackberry known for, really, aside from the little...
They had the keyboard on the phone and security.
But really, security.
Security is it.
So they're moving into enterprise software that is security-focused.
Now, the one thing that I can't get my head around quite yet is where they're going to
exactly focus because they're offering software, everything that can track and employ.
employee's mobile device and its usage to computer operating systems for guided missiles
to self-driving cars, autonomous cars. So they're really kind of all over the map when I read
their transcripts, their conference calls, and I'd like to see where they're going to really
hone in on with their software. Enterprise software, Simon, not exactly a space they have
to themselves. Well, the mobile devices is kind of transitioning, right? We used to know them
as smartphones, and now they've become known as Internet of Things devices, which also need really
good security. So now I see that Blackberry is referring to this as the enterprise of things.
I mean, it's going to be the next thing we're all hearing about. But again, you need good
security, you need good software for lots of little mobile devices buzzing around.
I think this is the time where we've got to just remind everybody that a clever
little one-liner is not an investment thesis, right? I mean, internet of things we can throw
around. Everybody bandies that around. It's like, oh, it's the internet of things.
It's all over the place. Try to go a little bit further with it. I mean, the enterprise of things
I appreciate the fact that, yes, that's what they're known for, right?
Is that software side, the security side.
But let's just take it one step at a time.
It's true, but the image that they do have is helping them.
They signed 3,500 new customers in the last quarter, a 16% increase.
And there are some large wins in there, some big, well-known companies.
And not all of them are in the regulated industries where they've, in the past, done really well.
So they're expanding out.
But yeah, I'd like to see where, really, the
the profit center is going to end up being because they're kind of all over the map right now.
Sure. And it's got to be more than security, right?
I mean, one of the reasons BlackBerry lost out to the Apple iPhone was because it was all about the user experience.
That Apple, you know, caught up with BlackBear on the security side of it.
But at the end of the day, people are going to buy what's offering the best experience.
BlackBerry's got to understand that.
One of the biggest winners on the New York Stock Exchange this week was Restoration Hardware,
shares up 25% after a fourth quarter report that included a pretty big drop in same.
store sales, Jason. Why the enthusiasm?
Well, I think the market is probably looking past that same store sales metric and looking
at the projections for the fiscal year upcoming. And they're projecting anywhere in the
neighborhood of $1.78 to $2.19 in earnings per share. So we take that at the midpoint.
The stock is trading at about 24 times forward estimates, which isn't all that absurd,
really, for a company that sells pretty high-end.
retail goods. Now, that is sort of a limited customer base. And I think, to me, it's interesting.
The membership model sort of pivot that they've made here this past year, it's an interesting
level they can pull in the short run, because I think it does help stoke results. I'm still
skeptical that it actually is something that leads to sustained long-term success and growth.
I mean, it's very easy to justify paying for that membership when you go to buy something
from restoration hardware. I mean, you buy something for $1,000. You're going to get 25% off of.
of it just for buying that $100 membership. So the numbers make sense right then and there.
And I'd also argue that probably most people are shopping at restoration hardware, $100
isn't going to really make or break them either. So then you have to ask yourself, like, longer
term, years down the road, how are the renewals numbers looking with this program?
And that's what I would focus on more than anything else, because at the end of the day,
it is a retailer. It is a high-end retailer. And I think that those problems are not quite as easily
solved. I do think the membership model is an interesting one, and I think it's a neat effort
there. But I would pay more attention to the renewal numbers in the coming years to see if it's
really gaining any traction.
Yeah, the membership model is interesting, Jason, because in a way, they're gaming the
system. So you can, like, just go to their website. There's a chandelier for $5,900
regular price. It's only $4,400 if you're a member. So are you going to join for $100?
You're going to buy a 25% coupon for $100. Of course.
And if that chances, you're probably going there that one time.
that year. You probably don't step foot in that store again for maybe a year. Then that renewal
comes up and you're scratching your head wondering, why did I get this in the first place? And
do I really need it for this coming year? I don't know.
I think you're right that it comes down to what will renewals be. But even more than
that, will having that membership and then receiving mailings from restoration over time
drive you to go back and buy more? You're like, hey, I paid for the membership. I'll buy
a new rug there.
I've got the solution. I mean, just a little free streaming on the side, some video, some
music. That's a little value ad right there. You're using that on a daily basis? They can
probably give Amazon a run for their money.
Absolutely. Free shipping.
Why not?
Over the past two years, shares of Dave and Busters have doubled. Fourth quarter profits
came in higher than expected this week. But Simon, the company is lowering expectations for
2017. And probably not a bad idea when you look at what a pretty nice run they've had
the last couple years.
Well, Jeff, this is a company that's really gaming the system, right?
I really like the way that Matt Greer, our producer, described this is, is that you
This is kind of a casino.
They're printing money right now.
They've got amusements that's about 53% of revenue.
These are the games that, you know, have got really, really high margins after you put them in the stores.
And, of course, food and beverages is the other half of the business.
And, of course, people that are older that are able to drink, high margin ticket items, is working for them, too.
Chris, the story for me at Dave & Busters is the unit economics of the new stores that they're building out.
They've now got a total of 92 stores, and they're opening about 11 or 12 a year.
But the cash on cash return, which means if you took the revenue that they're making, I'm sorry, the EBITDA that they're making in the first year, dividing it by the development costs of the stores, is at 52% right now.
That's fantastic. That means they're paying off all of their development costs in 20 months, and that's an excellent business proposition for anyone who wants to buy shares.
See, my concern with a company like Dave and Busters is that it really does seem like such a discretionary spending type of business, that we've been in an economic,
boom here in the US for a bunch of years. And at some point, when the next recession hits,
it seems like Dave & Busters is going to be among the first businesses to be hit.
Yeah, I think that's right. They're kind of targeting their cash-on-cash returns of about
35 percent. So when you see that the management is expecting that to be about 17 percent
lower than what they're getting, you're definitely getting the consumers that have
discretionary income right now. We might see that contract a little bit in the next
couple of years if we have a recession.
Yeah, it's almost like a casino in that regard. It's not where you're going
to go when times are tough. That said, I wonder how much the maintenance is going to be in the
locations and to keep the games up to date. Any thoughts on that?
To be determined, I mean, I think that a lot of that is the upfront cost that they're
putting in there, and they're still getting 52 percent on them. So, very high margin.
This week, Facebook unveiled Facebook Stories, a new feature that bears a very striking
resemblance to Snapchat. Jeff, if you're Snap, and more specifically, if you're a shareholder
of Snap, how worried are you about it?
are you about this? Well, you should be a bit worried, but Facebook for the past five years at least
has released feature after feature, service after service that mimicked or copied some of
Snapchat's own features. And some, most have actually failed, but some have gone on to become
part of Facebook, the Facebook experience, Instagram being the biggest example of lately taking
on more and more Snapchat features, and those are going well so far with their stories.
So now Facebook is doing the same thing with, mainly with photographs and your ability to tell a story,
individually with someone, one of your friends, directly, or with your audience directly.
My wife and I tried this out right before taping.
It was just like a Snapchat, send a photo to her.
She sends one back.
We're like, this is stupid.
But kids will like it.
What Facebook is trying to do is attract younger people, the 17 to 24 audience that Snapchat
is so strong in.
That said, these services are tougher to monetize.
So it's kind of funny that right now, Facebook is trying to grab those younger people.
Well, Snapchat is trying to have.
have more kind of Facebook-type revenue from their advertising. So they're both kind of melding
into each other.
So if you're Facebook, can't you look at this new feature as essentially a loss leader?
If Snapchat is under more pressure, if Snap is under more pressure to monetize Snapchat, maybe
that means ads start popping up in these stories and it becomes a less compelling experience
for younger people. And if you're Facebook, you're able to say, hey, ours is completely ad-free.
don't plan to monetize it anytime soon. And I think even the longer term thought, maybe,
well, we need younger people to be more involved. And over time, they'll evolve to the
Facebook platform itself. So, yeah, Chris, I think that's true. And I think the main thing
Snap needs to be worried about is just growing its audience, period.
I mean, this is far more important for Snap to be able to evolve beyond the teenage messaging
app. Because, I mean, that ultimately is what it is at the end of the day. I mean, I know
they like to consider themselves a camera company. I mean, I don't know. That's the
the wisest course of action either. Facebook can place all these bets all day long every day. I mean,
they've got so many platforms and so many ways to continue to add little bells and whistles to
their platforms. I mean, it's nothing for them to try anything. I mean, Snapchat is really faced
with a tremendous uphill battle here of trying to figure out how to attract people beyond sort of
that teen to younger 20s demographic because, yeah, sure, they're engaged, but I mean, they aren't
really big money spenders, right? I mean, how are you going to really really?
monetize that audience in a meaningful way, I don't think you can. And I mean...
Yeah, and Snap prides itself on making its app, you know, kind of complex. And Facebook has
gone and done the same thing, but made it very simple. So I will say that they did a good job.
It's really easy. It was like a snap to use the new feature. It has its charms.
We got Simon Fisher over here.
I'm loving that, Jeff. Up next, a couple of headlines and a few stocks on our radar.
This is Motley Fool Money.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and the
Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely
on what you hear. Welcome back to Motley Full Money, Chris Hill, here in studio with Jason
Moser, Simon, Erickson, and Jeff Fisher. Shares of Lulu Lemon Athletica fell 23% on Thursday
after a bad fourth quarter report and guidance, Simon, that was dramatically lower than
what Wall Street analysts were expecting.
Chris, this is what happens when Rhoda Pitcher leaves the company, right?
Tell me about it.
the executives of the company were saying that they're predicting the first same store sales decline in the past 28 quarters.
So obviously that's what the street was reacting forward.
When forward-looking guidance is that bad.
A lot of this was because they really botched a lot of their online sales channel.
The visual merchandising they were trying for the new depth of color in spring didn't work out.
Their course correcting, they say, don't worry about it.
We got under control.
I'll give them a quarter to figure that out.
But it is something that we need to see improved.
I think bigger picture for Lula Lemon is this is a company that's really carved out a very profitable niche in yoga.
And they've done that very well, and they've got great margins off of that.
And now the company needs to learn how to expand their product categories.
And we've seen them grow very well with MINS.
They've got the ABC line of pants and various other items, 20% growth in MINS year over year.
We see the Aviva line for teenagers.
That was up 28% year over year.
And now you've got international expansion, too.
They're trying out some new stores in Cheney.
China. But I think that you have to see calculated growth from Lulu Lemon because it's not just a
niche retailer of yoga pants anymore. It's got to become a larger entity. And that's what the
street wants to see. Our email address is Radio at Fool.com from longtime listener, Dr. Rick
Zabrodsky in Calgary, Alberta. A few months ago, my son left Uber to work for Lulu Lemon's
e-commerce division. He left his stock options to get rid of a toxic work culture. He'll be loading
up on Lulu Lemon's stock as soon as possible. P.S., he has yet to meet, Roda Pitcher.
That's, you know, hopefully she'll stop by the office.
Maybe she's an Uber ride.
Shares of Darden restaurants hitting a new high this week after third quarter profits came
in higher than expected.
Darden is the parent company of Olive Garden, Longhorn Steakhouse, the Capitol Grill.
And now Jason, Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen.
Never been there, but I sure do like the name.
And that's the $800 million acquisition that Darden pulled off.
Rolls right off the tongue.
I'm not really, I'm not sure what I'm more impressed with from this quarter.
Olive Garden's success in the to-go segment of the business continues to just astound.
I mean, growth of 17% for the quarter, or the fact that it was Olive Garden's 10th consecutive quarter of same store sales growth.
I mean, clearly, that's a concept that's resonating with a lot of people.
And I have a feeling our man behind the glass there probably went at least once this past quarter.
Absolutely.
I think they did a good thing in spinning off a lot of those restaurants with the real estate where they owned,
spending that property off to the Four Corners Property Trust. I think that allowed them to
monetize that real estate while focusing more on just operational excellence. And I think
that the cheddar acquisition, it seems like a pretty good one. I mean, when you look at
the unit economics, they're bringing in about $4.5 million annually per restaurant, average check
of around $13.50. So it's affordable. Bring in about $617 million to the top line immediately
with a restaurant base that should be able to grow. I mean, they have somewhere in the
neighborhood of 123 restaurants today. I'm sorry, 165, actually. Excuse me. So there are a lot of
reasons why I think Darden could continue to perform well. They obviously have a big portfolio
of different restaurants, which certainly plays into a strength here in this restaurant segment.
So all in all, they continue to perform very well.
All right. We'll get to the Stock Center radar.
behind the glass. Steve Brod, I'll hit you with a question. Also behind the glass this
week, longtime listener, Joe Dolan in the house. So thanks for talking about Joe.
Simon Erickson. You're up first. What are you looking at this week?
Chris, I'm looking at I-Robot. The ticker is IRBT. This is a company that makes a lot of the
home cleaning products you've gotten used to, the Roomba vacuum cleaner, the Bravo mop.
And these have been devices that have just kind of buzzed around and, you know, clean the floors
and done household chores before. But now they're getting integrated to the cloud.
and they're becoming smarter.
They're now going to be connected through Amazon Alexa,
and you've got artificial intelligence that's actually making them able to clean
rather than just run around on your floor.
I think that's a lot more valuable in the smart home of the future,
so I'm keeping an eye on these guys.
Steve, question about I-Robot?
How much time does a company like I-Robot have to get this right?
Because it seems like they've been at this for a very long time.
Yeah, I think that the Internet connectivity and the real push for the smart home right now,
Steve, gives them really the window of opportunity. They've got the spatial recognition figured out for years. It's just a matter of how do you actually get it to do what you want it to do, which is actually clean your house. I give them a year to really see how this goes in the smart home, because I think now's the time to do it.
Jason Moser, what are you looking at? My wife gave me a room before my birthday last year. Then we got the thing sweeping around the hardwoods. It cleans up after the dogs pretty well, actually. I've got Teledoc on my radar. Ticker is T-D-O-C. They provide telehealth services via mobile.
devices, internet, video, phone, basically connecting patients to doctors and preventing you
from having to actually go to that doctor's office, which we know is typically a very inefficient
process. And I've been following this company since it went public a little bit more
than a year ago. Stock is having a great year thus far, up better than 50%. And that's because
they continue to grow their top line at 65% plus rates. They're adding more visits, adding
more members. This is an interesting business that is disrupting sort of the traditional
doctor visit sort of model that we've grown up with. I think it's one that's got some legs here.
I'm going to keep following it. Steve? Are insurers bullish on this company?
Yeah, you know, it's interesting. They get more partnerships with not only companies,
but health plans and whatnot. And I think insurers are finding ways to add this sort of feature
as supplemental to plans that they're selling out. So, yeah, I do think they find this type of
offering very attractive. Jeff Fisher, what are you looking at?
So, Momo, the ticker is M-O-M-O. It's fun to say.
And the business that they offer is also called MoMo. It's a social networking platform
in China. They have 81 million monthly active users. Earnings per share have been soaring and
are expected to grow about 60 percent this year. This company's revenue, Steve, has gone
from 3 million in 2013 to 550 million the past year. Astronomical. Trades it at 25
times forward earnings. Again, it's a Chinese company, so there's some, you need to watch
that, but Momo.
Steve?
Do you trust numbers coming out of China?
I do. I'm starting to
more and more when you got Baidu.
You got, yeah, transparency is growing, yes.
All right. Thanks for being here, guys.
Up next, a conversation with documentary filmmaker Ted Braun.
This is Motley Full Money.
All right, before we get to my conversation with Ted Braun,
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Welcome back to Motley Fool Money. I'm Chris Hill. The biggest showdown on Wall Street over the past few years has been about Herbalife.
A company in the business of nutritional supplements, Herbalife has been called the best-managed pyramid scheme in the history of the world by hedge fund manager Bill
Ackman. And that battle between Ackman and Herbalife is the subject of the new documentary film,
Betting on Zero. Joining me now from Los Angeles is the film's director Ted Braun. Ted,
thanks so much for being here.
Pleasure to be with you, Chris. Thanks for having me on.
Your first documentary film was about genocide in Darfur.
What got you interested in making a film about the battle between a hedge fund manager and a company like Herbalife?
I came back from Sudan, oddly enough, curious about the place of money in American life.
I was in a country where an entirely different set of values were operating.
People were motivated by a very deep desire for a functioning justice system.
They were motivated by a desire for the international community to come and protect them.
And all of that made me appreciate in a way I didn't quite fully understand.
how central money was to our sense of ourselves as Americans, to our way of resolving dispute class,
and in many cases even our sense of self-worth.
And that had just been kind of rattling around inside of me for a couple of years,
and Glenn Zipper, the producer of this film, approached me with a line on financing a film set in the world of American corporate conflict,
a host of different two or three sentences about Bill Ackman and that conflict,
which pitted two years, seemed to have the makings for a good, substantial,
feature documentary that would also allow me to explore this interest in money and its place in the
American dream. I want to get to Ackman in a second, but you've got people in this film who are
involved in Herbalife. And Herbalife is, I mean, if you asked someone at Herbalife,
tell me about the business, they would talk about nutrition and how this is a company all
about helping people lead healthier lives. Watching your film, it is clear that largely
if not entirely, it is a company that is a multi-level marketing company. It is all about recruiting
other people to sell herbalife products and the profits flow up that way. And what blew me away
was just the very, very personal stories that you tell here with people in big cities like Chicago,
but also smaller towns in Oklahoma who get involved with herbal life and end up,
in some cases, losing their life savings.
Those being into the subject you come upon often,
and they counterbalance the stories that Herbalife present.
People realize film was as alluring was.
So the film and take viewers on a...
You mentioned The American Dream,
and that's one of the things I was thinking about
during a scene in your film,
and yours is a documentary film,
and yet I was reminded of a scene in the movie The Big Short,
where in the Big Short, the American Dream is represented by American housing.
Everyone wants to own a home.
And you have people in the Big Short who are selling homes to people who really have no business owning a home.
They just don't have the financial means to do so.
And in your case, in your film, it's Michael Johnson, the longtime CEO who stepped down as CEO last year.
He's still chairman of the board.
but video of him talking about how we're all about recruiting.
This is an internal video where he's telling him, we're all about recruiting.
You need to recruit people to sell our products no matter who they are.
And I thought, well, gosh, that's kind of like the big short, only it's recruit people to sell,
even if they have no business being in the business of selling anything.
Recruiting and its play of a pyramid scheme and recruiting new members against Turbo Life.
and one that ultimately the Federal Trade Commission in their settlement with Herbalife last summer
came down with a very clear verdict about, and the verdict was quite damning.
They found Herbalife in violation of federal law.
They charged Herbalife with four counts of false, deceptive, and unfair business practices.
And the centerpiece of the complaint was this issue of recruiting versus retail sales,
and they found that the company that relied upon recruiting people.
And in that way, vindicated what Mr. Ackman had been alleging for the last several years.
Bill Ackman, for those unfamiliar, is a billionaire hedge fund manager.
And he gets involved because he sees a company stock that he thinks is ripe for shorting
and gets involved first in kind of a small way with a small short and then increases his position.
And it's interesting to watch this play out.
your film because Ackman is so convinced he is right, which, and we talk about this on the show
from time to time, it's one thing to buy shares of a company and bet on it to go higher. You
almost need a stronger conviction and a stronger stomach to short a stock and bet on it to go
down because you can be right in the long run, but in the short run, you can get crushed. And in
the case of Bill Ackman, right out of the gate, he's looking very much correct, both in terms of
his conviction and in terms of what's happening with the money, with the hundreds of millions
of dollars that he has put at stake on this short. And then it's not too long before he
starts to lose in a very big way. When you were going through this process of making the
film of following Bill Ackman, what did you observe about his temperament throughout the process as
this begins to go very badly for him and for his investors.
Remarkably steadfast and unwavering in his convictions.
In the most challenging hours of this conflict, you know, stay the course.
And that conviction and steadiness, I think, was one of the more fascinating parts of him as a character.
And it's something that I think the film probes and explores.
Where does this conviction come from?
To some extent, you know, it comes from an enormous amount of confidence in his analysis.
Though the phrase never made it into the finished film, at one point in an interview with me, he said he, you know, he felt that, you know, in most cases, investments, you know, involve a certain degree of uncertainty.
But in this case, he felt that his analysis, you know, was solid to a degree of absolute certainty, which so to him a moral dimension of,
this investment, a belief, a conviction that he was doing something that was good, not just
for his investors, but for the country as a whole, cited the ire of a number who were on the other
side of the trade, from him, and in particular, from Michael Johnson, the CEO of Irbalife,
who at one point very early in the conflict. And it actually led him to say that even if he
would get out of the investment, he would continue to pursue Herbalife, that makes for a very
unusual and interesting character in a film and a very unusual and interesting Wall Street figure.
Yeah, I mean, Bill Ackman, beyond the fact that he's a billionaire, has a reputation for being
arrogant. So the fact that you've made a reportedly arrogant billionaire come off as a sympathetic
character that the audience is largely rooting for is a pretty amazing accomplishment.
Speaking of billionaires, this is a story that gets more interesting when a billionaire jumps
in on the other side of the equation.
And that's Carl Icahn, who, and this is part of why the investment, the short of Herbalife stock
begins to go badly for Bill Ackman, is because Carl Icon comes in and buys about 10, 12 percent
of the company.
And correct me if I'm wrong.
But I think the main reason Carl Icon buys the stock is not because he believes this is an
amazing business that's changing the world for good.
I think he just hates Bill Ackman's guts.
That's certainly the view of William Cohen, the Vanity Fair writer who has observed both
men at close range and written about both of them at length.
He wrote about their battle for Vanity Fair in 2013.
And I think there's a lot of evidence to support that.
Mr. Icon claims that this is nothing more than a good investment for him,
that he believes in the company,
and he's made simply a smart and shrewd decision about where it invest his resources.
The timing of the fact that it occurred very shortly after CNBC television,
a battle that I'm sure many of your listeners are familiar with,
one of the most color-ended in name-calling,
and a lot of really relacted vengeance and feud on a personal level.
Coming up, we'll talk about just how badly Herbalife does not want you to see this film.
You're listening to Motley Fool Money.
Welcome back to Motley Full Money, Chris Hill, talking with Ted Braun, director of the new documentary, Betting on Zero.
One of the things that you show very vividly in your documentary is something that you've alluded to.
that is Michael Johnson, the CEO of Urban Life, and the reaction to Bill Ackman's short.
It would be one thing if Ackman was not so public about it, but he's very public that this is
not just what he believes to be a good business decision. He makes it very personal.
And Herbalife doesn't just sit on their hands, feeling insulted. They go after Bill Ackman.
They do everything they can to boost their profile, bringing in high-profile athletes to promote
the Herbalife brand, they don't sit still when they feel like they're being attacked.
All of that, Ted, is prelude to this question. Now that your film is out, what is Herbalife's
reaction to your documentary? Well, it's been disturbing, to say the least. I had no agenda
when I set out to make this film. I thought the antagonists in this battle had competing and very
interesting claims. And I was, I was interested in dramatizing this problem. You said you found
it, you know, surprising to feel sympathetic for Bill Ackman. And I think one of the goals of good
documentary filmmaking, as with any kind of good storytelling, is to get the audiences into
shoes of people they would not otherwise know or understand. And I very much had the goal of
getting the audience into the shoes of both Mr. Ackman and Julie Contreras and there was her campaign.
and herbal life and its executives.
Ultimately, despite, you know, two plus years of conversations with herbal life,
the time that we locked the picture that we stopped editing the film,
they declined to participate in the film.
You know, we engaged in conversations.
I spoke with a number of their executives, Michael Johnson,
a lot of off-the-record conversations tell me understand what the going on with the company.
But ultimately, they declined to participate and understand that.
But within weeks or two of announcing that the film was
premiering film festival, one of their lobbyists in Washington, D.C., Hillary Rosen, tweeted
to Jane Rosenthal, Robert De Niro's partner at the Tribeca Film Festival, that the Tribeca Film Festival's
reputation was at stake because they were screening this film that the film had been bought and paid
for it by Bill Ackman. This was not true. This was a falsehood. Tweeted this without disclosing the fact
that she was paid, and her firm, Knickerbocker, the lobbyist for her life. And this sort of
intimidation went on after the film premiered. And then these, you know, Opal from seeing it,
reached a sort of crazy culmination in October when we were screening at the double
exposure film festival in Washington, D.C., a festival devoted to investigative filmmaking.
And Friday afternoon, the film had sold out well in advance of the screening, and 73 seats.
Exactly half the house at the National Portrait Gallery had been purchased by investigative filmmaking,
and so there were a lot of investigative journalists at the screening.
and caught the attention of a lot of the press there and ended up being a story in Politico
and ultimately ended.
But these are troubling actions on the part of a company that had an opportunity to participate in the film.
And most of them were taken without ever having seen the film a conversation about.
So where do you think this is going in terms of Herbalife's business and therefore in terms of
herbalife's stock price?
One of the things that you established very early in the film is that Bill Ackman, when it comes to shorting a stock,
is nothing if not patient. In one example, he waited seven years for a short of a stock to pay off.
And he's a lot younger than Carl Icon. So I'm just curious if you have any gut feeling of where this is going over the next couple of years.
Substantial making the film, what he had settled, them charging our life with. And as part of that, basically,
revenue, not from recruiting, but a very, very different company from the one that first shorted.
If they don't, betting on zero is in theaters around the country now and is available on iTunes
in April. For more information, you can go to betting on zero movie.com. Ted Braun, thank you so much
for being here. Chris, a great pleasure. Thanks for talking about the film. I'm glad to enjoy it and hope your listeners do too.
That's going to do it for this week's edition of Motley Full Money. Our engineer,
Here is Steve Broido. Our producer is Matt Greer. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you next week.
