Motley Fool Money - Big Tech's Big Returns, Sports Business in the Spotlight
Episode Date: January 28, 2022Apple posts record revenue. Microsoft makes its intentions clear with respect to its gaming division. Visa and American Express rise on strong results. Tesla tells Wall Street not to expect any new mo...dels this year. Home Depot's getting a new CEO while Lowe's gets a new partner in Petco. Atlassian raises guidance and McDonald's is optimistic about the McPlant Burger. Emily Flippen and Ron Gross analyze those stories, discuss areas of the market that look attractive right now, and share two stocks on their radar: Fulgent Genetics and Garmin. John Ourand from Sports Business Journal discusses NFL ratings, what the Olympics mean for NBC, the state of ESPN+, and the prospects for a Major League Baseball season. Want 15 more stock ideas? They're included in our free Investing Starter Kit. Visit http://fool.com/StarterKit to get your copy. Stocks: AAPL, MSFT, ATVI, V, AXP, PTON, TSLA, TEAM, HD, LOW, WOOF, MCD, DIS, CMCSA, FLGT, GRMN Host: Chris Hill Guests: Emily Flippen, Ron Gross, John Ourand Engineer: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Apple sets a new record. Microsoft's CEO makes his intentions clear. Payment businesses get hot.
And that's just in our opening segment. Investors assemble. Motley Fool Money starts now.
That's why they call it money.
The best thing.
Global headquarters. This is Motley Fool Money.
It's the Motley Full Money radio show. I'm Chris Hill. I'm joined by Motley Fool Senior analyst, Emily Flippen, and Ron Gras. Good to see you both.
Hey, Chris. How are you doing, Chris?
We've got the latest headlines from Wall Street. We'll talk sports business with media reporter
John Ulrand. And as always, we've got a couple of stocks on our radar. But we begin with the big
macro. GDP grew at nearly 7% in the fourth quarter, making 2021 the strongest year of growth
in the U.S. since 1984. Ron, you remember 1984? I do. When you think about the last few weeks
for the market to be reminded of the strength of the underlying economy. For me, that's welcome news.
I think I went to my first heavy metal concert in 1984, as a matter of fact. Good times.
But yes, Chris, this was a strong report. It was good to see. Any good news kind of in this environment
is welcome. Much better than expected pace to end 2021. But that pace is going to lead to higher
interest rates, which I would think is what investors are reacting to. For the full year, the
economy grew 5.7 percent, as you said, largest increase in decades. The economy benefited
from vaccinations, cheap credit, economic stimulus, but do not count on really any of that continuing
in 2022. The good news is that economists suspect Omicron to be a drag on the economy only in January
and perhaps much of February, but then they believe it will start to ease.
The Fed will likely start to raise interest rates in March to slow the economy and inflation.
Three or four hikes, I think, seem like a definite at this point.
Some I saw are predicting as many as seven hikes.
To that, I say, ugh.
That's a lot of hikes.
We'll see how the market digests that.
It's important to know that the fourth quarter strengthened GDP was led largely by the
rebuilding of inventory by businesses that does indicate confidence among those businesses
that they can sell those goods through. That's a wait and see. We have to see how that bears out.
Supply chain problems will also be something to watch closely as we continue through this
year. And finally, I'll say, wrapping up 2021, the economy recovered almost 19 million of the 22 million
jobs lost near the peak of the pandemic. Wages have grown at the fastest pace in decades,
but consumers' purchasing power has certainly been hurt by those higher prices.
Let's get to some earnings. It was a big week, and we'll start with Apple.
First quarter revenue was just under $124 billion, making it the biggest single quarter in company history.
CEO Tim Cook said that Apple's supply chain issues are improving, which begs the question, Emily.
What kind of revenue is Apple going to put up when the supply chain is actually good?
Well, just looking at Apple's quarter, you wouldn't think those consumers are under pricing
pressure, as Ron just mentioned, because Apple absolutely knocked it out of the park with this
quarter, which was surprising given the issues they've had with obtaining chips for their
devices, clearly a vital input in supplying products for consumers to buy. But earnings still grew
25% year-of-year. Same story on revenue, up 11% year-of-year, the highest they've seen. So a great
quarter for Apple. And while gross margins also improved, as an investor, I just find myself
kind of scratching my head with Apple. I think what the market is missing with this story
is just the innovation, right? What is the new thing Apple is going to be doing these days?
Because the most exciting thing they announced this quarter was something called SharePlay.
And Ron, Chris, do either of you know what SharePlay is?
No idea.
I do not.
Well, it allows you to share content, like music.
in video over FaceTime. And look, look, that's great. I mean, it's not a bad thing, but we're
talking about the most valuable company in the world at over $2.5 trillion.
Look, SharePlay just isn't going to cut it. Apple's a beast of what they do, but you have
nearly $64 billion in cash on your balance sheet. Come on, let's buy Peloton Apple. Let's do it. Let's
shake things up. No, no, do not buy a Peloton. Let's stick with that for a second, because
That's an idea I've seen out there. Emily, Apple's made a lot of investments in health.
That's a big part of the Apple Watch. I mean, all kidding aside, does Peloton make sense as an
acquisition for Apple?
I really think it does. The engagement levels that Peloton posts for it are truly impressive.
And while the market is clearly much smaller than what Peloton believed it to be at one point,
the market still exists. And Apple hasn't done that well in some of their other.
initiatives, right? Apple TV comes to mind as not being a huge player in the streaming
markets. If you want to make Apple Fitness a success, I think an acquisition in this case
is needed. Microsoft's second quarter results were highlighted by nearly 52 billion in revenue
and CEO Satya Nadella following up on last week's acquisition of Activision Blizzard by confirming
that yes, in fact, gaming is the next big area of investment for Microsoft.
Ron.
Yeah, obviously Cloud being the the, the folks.
over the last several years with gaming being left, you know, a little bit behind. But I like
that move, actually, because Cloud is what transformed this company into the $2. trillion
company is today. Interestingly, when the earnings report was released, the stock looked
really weak. Investors, their knee-jerk reaction was to sell the stock off. But things quickly
turned once management assured investors that the cloud business still did have growth ahead,
because despite the headlines about Activision, this still largely is a cloud story.
Looking at some of the metrics for the quarter, sales were up 20%.
As you said, almost $52 billion in sales for the first time.
Profits beat expectations.
The Intelligent Cloud segment was up 26%.
The Azure Cloud business, which is part of that Intelligent Cloud segment,
posted a 46% increase in revenue.
But that was actually a deceleration in growth from recent quarters.
So strong in a vacuum, not so strong when you look at recent quarters, and that is really what investors focus on.
Some of the other segments, productivity and business processes, which include Office 365 and LinkedIn, up 19%.
The more personal computing division, again, the worst name of division I've ever heard, more personal computing.
That's Windows Surface, Xbox, up 15%.
Shortages of stemming conductors still hurting Xbox and the surface business.
But they're managing that relatively well.
Operating income up 24%, earnings per share, up 22%.
Again, the forecast for the cloud business was for an increase in revenue for the coming quarter.
Investors like to see that.
They returned almost $11 billion to shareholders in the form of share repurchases and dividends for the quarter.
Love to see that.
And then, as you said, don't forget the pending acquisition of Activision, significant driver
to the gaming business.
And I guess the Metaverse is coming whether we like it or not.
So that will certainly help Microsoft compete in that space.
I'm still kind of shaking my head at investors selling off this stock because it wasn't quite
as strong as they wanted it to be.
What kind of short-term mentality do you have to have to look at Microsoft after this quarter
Nadella laying out their plans for where this company is going and saying, no, you know, it's a
Nah, I think the salad days are over.
I know, 30 times earning.
So, you know, it's not dirt cheap.
So you have some people take some money off the table when the numbers don't look exactly the way they want it.
But stock saw 15% from its 52-week high, along with other things.
49% return on equity for this company.
They buy back stock.
They pay a dividend.
I am a proud shareholder.
Big week for the card companies.
Visa's first quarter revenue topped $7 billion for the first time ever.
And American Express saw record spending on its card as Amex wrapped up its own fiscal year.
Shares of both Visa and American Express up this week.
Emily, I kind of feel like even if you're not a shareholder of these companies,
you have to like what this says about consumer spending.
Certainly.
And CNN had a headline that was along the lines of credit card companies soar as consumers go on spending sprees.
And I know we like to have our own foolish takes on stories, but I have to say that about sums it up here.
It's a good time to be a financial services business.
People are getting back moving and spending.
It's showing up in the financial performance of these businesses.
Visa in particular, pointing at cross-payment volume, increasing dramatically year-over-year.
That's a really great business for them because it's higher fee, so it results in higher margin
revenue for the business.
American Express is a little different.
They have the same tailwinds in spending, but less opportunity to benefit from credit card adoption
internationally because they're largely focused on a North American market.
And they spent a lot of time talking about millennials and Gen Z and their perceptions of American
Express, all very positive.
But as a millennial myself, I have to say, I think American Express needs a rebranding,
because I do not associate that brand with youth.
You know, that kind of straightforward headline writing may cut it at CNN, but it just won't
work at a place like the New York Post.
You need some wordplay.
You need something with a little bit more exciting.
All right. After the break, we've got the latest on EV software and a big change in the C-suite.
Stay right here. You're listening to Motley Full Money.
Welcome back to Motley Full Money. Chris Hill here with Emily Flippin and Ron Gross.
Tesla warned investors that supply chain issues might affect production this year and that no new models will be coming in 2022.
On the flip side, Ron, Tesla's fourth quarter profits and revenue did look pretty good.
Yep. You nailed that those are the high-
highlights right there. Easily beat expectations, but the stock sold off on disappointing product
launch guidance. The stock's now off 34% from its 52-week high. The metrics in a vacuum for
the quarter look good. Revenue up 65%, gross margins and operating margins widened. Profits
up 750% from a small base, but from a year ago. For the year, they delivered more than
936,000 vehicles worldwide. That's up 87% from the
the year before. Elon Musk actually returned to the conference call this quarter. He wasn't on it
last quarter, and he spent a fair amount of time discussing the potential of self-driving technology
and a humanoid robot called Optimus that the company has under development. He said the robot
may be the most important product that Tesla is working on and has the potential to be more
significant than its vehicle business. So some of the bluster that Elon Musk is noted for,
I don't think investors appreciated. They're focused on really the car business right now and
product developments, and they weren't happy with what they heard. The company said they would
not bring any new vehicles like the cyber truck to market this year because of supply chain
disruptions. The lack of a launch of a low-budget car in the mid-20,000 range also disappointed
investors. CFO warned that near-term higher input costs could impact margins. Tesla's factories
have been running below capacity for several quarters because of supply chain problems. I'm not
sure anyone to necessarily be surprised about that, but it's just some highlights that they made on
the call. I can't give any guidance here on valuation. It's just literally too hard for me to predict
what the future looks like for this business. I do see some investors taking advantage of the
stock's weakness to establish your increase of position. Obviously, some are heading for the hills
with the shares down 34% from their 52-week high. It does remain a buy in eight Motley Fool
services. Collaborative software company Atlassian posted strong results in the second quarter.
They raised guidance and said they expect subscription revenue to increase by 50% this fiscal year.
Not surprisingly, shares of Atlassian up more than 10% on Friday, Emily.
Teamwork truly makes the dream work for this company, right? Alassian's bread and butter has been their core products, their team collaboration software. And it's just as relevant as ever to be in the business of collaboration software. Their core products, things like Jira and Trello are still performing really well. And that showed up in their financial performance. They had adjusted earnings of 50 cents a share, which was much greater than the 39 cents expected. And revenue was also 7% more
expected, and that represented 37% growth year over year.
So certainly a business, albeit a large one, that is sustaining growth pretty steadily.
But as much as there is a rising tide here, there's also a lot of execution strength.
The space is really competitive and many expected growth to slow in this industry coming out
of the pandemic.
But really, we haven't seen that show up in Atlassian's products yet.
They're making a ton of money from their cloud apps, not just their cloud products.
which are sales made in their entire ecosystem.
I'd say this is a great business, really strong, but a bit of caution may be warranted here.
The business is still unprofitable, and while they generate a ton of cash flow,
I think if there are any sort of weakness in terms of the way that we saw with DocuSign over the last quarter,
any sort of pull forward from revenue, this is still the type of business that can see its valuation contract.
Home Depot is getting a new CEO.
On March 1st, Chief Operating Officer Ted Decker will move into the corner office.
He's been with the company for more than two decades.
And this ends Craig Meener's seven-year run as CEO.
And when you look at what shares a Home Depot did during his tenure, Ron, Ted Decker has
a tough act to follow.
For sure, shares up 275 percent-ish since he took the reins back in 2014, return on capital
of 32 percent currently up from around 21 percent when he became CEO.
So a very impressive tenure.
Decker looks awfully qualified for this role.
Role's in strategic development, finance and merchandising, currently president and C.OO.
I actually really do like when a merchant rises to the CEO level, but it's not without
its risks because a strong merchant doesn't necessarily translate to a strong capital
allocator and sometimes don't have other essential leadership qualities that CEOs need.
We're seeing this play out over at Bed Bath, where do you know, do you?
merchandise manager, Mark Tritton, from Target, moved over to the C-suite at Bed Bath.
Too early to tell how that goes, but I think so far so good.
But I do like when merchants are in charge of merchant-type businesses.
So I think this company is in good hands, stocks at 22 times.
I think it still remains a great company to own right here.
Well, and this sort of follows the ascension that Meener had.
I mean, he had been with the company before he was.
ascended to CEO. And anytime this type of thing happens, there's always some questioning of,
should they have brought in an upstart outsider to have a fresh pair of eyes on the business?
But when you think about how, you know, this is not the Home Depot that was in need of a turnaround
like it was earlier in this century. Agreed. Steady as she goes. It's a very strong company.
He's inheriting, Ted is inheriting a very solid company with great metrics, great market position
with Lowe's obviously being the number two in the space, but right up there with them.
And I think he's got a tough act to follow, but he's being given a very strong company.
We've got some Lowe's news later in the show that we will get to.
The story of McDonald's fourth quarter results and really their entire fiscal year was dealing with rising costs.
Food, labor, paper products are all more expensive, and McDonald's expects those costs to
tick up in 2022.
On the plus side, Emily, the early results of the McPlant Burger seem genuinely encouraging.
While earnings and revenue did both mildly miss expectations, I have to say this quarter
wasn't nearly as bad as what it could have been.
As you mentioned, between rising inflation and labor shortages, many assumed it'd be just a bad
time to be McDonald's. But in truth, we're apparently all eating a lot more McNuggets and a lot more
McPlants than we like to emit. And even worse, we're willing to pay more for them. So while
margins have been dampened over the past few quarters, and that's certainly keeping the stock down,
McDonald's is actually doing a pretty good job, in my opinion, of making use of technology
and automation. They're improving that tightening labor market, plus hiking prices to pass along
those costs of inflation to consumers. And we're literally all just eating it up.
up. So, there's clearly a little bit of pricing power with McDonald's here that I think
the market is underreacting to, but this has certainly been supported by the sales of Mick Plant,
which was a partnership that has been long in the making between McDonald's and Beyond Meat.
They tested out a trial of the Mick Plant, their vegetarian burger, and a few select
stores. Trial went really well, and now they're going to expand it to more stores before
potentially expanding it nationwide. This is going to be critical for Beyond Meat.
Ron Gross, Emily Flippin, we will see you later in the show.
Up next, John O'Rand from the Sports Business Journal, will weigh in on NFL ratings, ESPN Plus, and the prospects for a major league baseball season.
Stay right here.
You're listening to Motley Full Money.
Welcome back to Motley Full Money.
I'm Chris Hill.
We're just days away from the Winter Olympics, the Super Bowl.
and hopefully pitchers and catchers reporting for spring training.
We'll see.
But here to talk through a few of the business angles related to the sports world is John Orrand.
He covers media for the Sports Business Journal, and he joins me now from his home in D.C.
Thanks for being here, John.
Absolutely, Chris.
Thanks for having me.
Let's start with the NFL.
Ratings are through the roof.
I think last weekend, the four playoff games averaged nearly 40 million viewers.
You never want to jinx.
if you're one of the television networks or the NFL.
But is it safe to assume that this is going to continue through the Super Bowl?
I mean, this really seems to have built on the momentum in the second half of the NFL season.
If you view the NFL like a TV series, then, yeah, it should continue going on
because they just had sort of a knockout round and Tom Brady got knocked out.
Of course, Aaron Rogers, who knows what's going to go with them.
And those are sort of cliffhangers that got tied up a little bit.
And people want to come in then for the next round to see what happens to it.
Generally, if the ratings are up about 20% per round, which is what it looks like,
you should pretty much expect that to go in the championship series and in the Super Bowl
with a billion caveats, as you know.
I mean, down to what the weather's like.
Is it going to be cold?
It looks like there's going to be a massive snowstorm in the Northeast this weekend,
which should make ratings go up a ton.
close games, that makes ratings go up a lot more as well. So there are a lot of caveats to it,
but the NFL is sitting pretty, and they're feeling pretty good right now. A few years ago,
there was a narrative going around, and it went like this. The broadcast rights for live
sports are a bubble that is going to burst. Unless I miss something, I don't think that bubble has
burst. And when I look at the ratings that the NFL has been putting up lately, I
I realize every sport is different, but is it safe to assume that the cost of live sports
is going to go off, in part because more than just traditional television networks are going
to get in.
I mean, we've seen Amazon make a big push for the NFL.
It wouldn't surprise anyone if Apple did the same thing for their streaming TV.
How much more can they go up?
The NFL just completed deals for a contract that hasn't started yet.
that's worth $110 billion, billion with a B.
I mean, it's phenomenal.
I will say this.
I've been writing about the sports rights bubble for two decades now,
and it continues to grow.
And my point is there really has been no sports right bubble.
But I'll suggest to you that there is a bubble,
and the bubble doesn't affect big-time sports.
So the NFL, there's no bubble right now.
The NBA, there's no bubble.
The Big 10 college conference.
Those rights are coming up this year. There's no bubble with that. But for these sort of mid-tier, lower-tier sports that just would come to the table and immediately get a couple million dollars for their rights, those are the types of deals that are drying up. And when and if that goes and affects the bigger leagues, it's not going to happen anytime soon.
We talked earlier in the week on this show about Comcast and their latest earnings report and the fact that they have the U.S.
broadcast rights for the Winter Olympics to Summer Olympics for really for the next decade or so.
How much pressure is on Comcast for the Winter Olympics to go well?
Setting aside the political implications of the games being in China, it seems like an opportunity
and also a challenge for Comcast if one of their main goals, and it does seem to be one
of their main goals, is to get more and more people using the Peacock streaming app.
Yeah, I actually am taking a contrary stance to the Olympics coming up and that there's not a lot of pressure on NBC.
Ratings are going to be down big time.
NBC's already informed the advertisers not to expect them to hit a ratings guarantee that was in the original ad contracts.
The U.S. team is projected to win fewer medals than in any other Winter Olympics.
The time zone changes make it really tough.
Nobody's really expecting there to be a lot of activity on peacock or TV ratings for these games,
which makes it almost easier for Comcast and NBC going into this.
People are expecting a very low bar to jump over if they get to that bar grade.
Where the pressure comes in and how they've always viewed this is in 24, all of a sudden those
Olympics go to Paris.
And then in 2028, the Olympics go to Los Angeles.
And so that's where the pressure comes in, because that's where Comcast and marketers and sponsors
and everybody associated with the sports business have really projected a huge amount
of interest from ratings from online.
And that's where the pressure comes in.
Now, nobody expects much, and we'll see what happens.
Comcast made it clear that they don't really have the numbers in terms of
subscribers and overall viewers on Peacock that they would like, and they're working to address that.
Switching to the Disney Corporation, what is the state of ESPN Plus at the moment, as you see it?
ESPN Plus is a good adjunct to ESPN right now. It's a good adjunct to the Disney Plus bundle right now.
So if you want to get into Disney Plus, we have some sports services that are over here.
ESPN Plus right now is really, in my mind, it's set up almost as a transition type of product
because they don't have the best sports and they don't have the best editorial on there.
They have good sports, they have good editorial, but the price point is low and they're testing
and they're trying to get people used to going to ESPN Plus or to Hulu now
where you watch NHL games to watch your sports.
their main, they make the most money from ESPN, of course, from cable operators.
That's not going away anytime soon, but it is declining, that they're overseeing a declining
business there. And so they're trying to prop up ESPN Plus. And so when it happens where
ESPN, the linear channel, declined so much that they're going to make it available over the top.
They're in a much better position than any other sports network that's out there right now.
Is there a point at which ESPN says, you know what, it's going to make sense for us to take
this larger sport, more popular sport, and make it exclusive on ESPN Plus at the expense of
their cable network?
Yes, I think it makes sense.
And I think that follows what ESPN has always done.
Back in the early 1990s, when ESPN launched ESPN 2, this is a famous story where they took
Duke North Carolina basketball game.
They were two top five teams at the time,
and they put it on ESPN2,
even though ESPN2 was in almost no homes.
And the idea was they wanted to pressure the cable operators
and the satellite distributors to carry ESPN2.
And that's what they're starting to do with,
you can tell with the Australian Open.
If you're following any tennis fan on social media,
they're complaining because all of a sudden ESPN's not showing overnight matches.
They're making the tennis fan.
go to ESPN Plus in order to watch those overnight matches.
So they're trying to, you know, it explains a deal that they did with UFC,
a mixed martial arts company.
So much programming, including the pay-per-views, are on ESPN Plus.
And where that makes sense is that the fans of UFC are really hardcore fans,
and you want the hardcore fans to come in and actually pay money to see their event.
And so UFC and ESPN, both.
credit that UFC deal with gusing the ESPN Plus's subscriber numbers.
I'm old enough and a big enough college basketball fan.
I remember that moment, and I'm pretty sure my cable system did not have ESPN, too,
so I missed that game.
Last thing before I let you go, how confident are you that we're going to have a full
Major League Baseball season happening this year?
Right now, the Players Association and the owners are at odds with one.
another. I haven't checked, you know, Fanduel or any of the sports betting sites, but I imagine
there's a prop bet there in terms of whether or not the season is going to start on time.
What do you think we're looking at? Quick caveat. I'm not covering this on a daily basis,
but of course I cover the business and I talk to the people that are involved. And I always go
back to the start of last season. And the owners went to the players,
and said, you know, because of COVID, because of the shortened spring training,
we want to take our 162 game schedule for this season only and make it a 100, make it a 140 game schedule.
So they told the players, you get to work less and we will pay you the same amount of money.
And the players didn't trust the owners and said, no, we'll do that full, we'll do the full 162 game season.
And that to me suggests that these two sides can't agree on the color of the sky right.
now. And the idea that they are going to be able to sort of get together and find a happy
medium between their two totally opposing sides is going to take a lot more gumption than I think
either side has right now. So I'm very skeptical that they're going to start the season on time.
Isn't the USFL alternative pro football league? Aren't they starting up in April? This seems
like a windfall for them if there's no Major League Baseball in April. April 16th is going to be the very
first USFL game. It's going to be on both Fox and NBC. It's going to be the very first scheduled
simulcast of an event since the Super Bowl won in 1967. That was 55 years ago. And I can't think of any,
one of the reasons they picked mid-April, it's because it's a couple of, you know, early season
baseball games. Now, potentially, there are no baseball games there. The NCAA basketball tournaments
will have happened, potentially no baseball. Before you're really getting into the NBA and
NHL playoffs, I mean, this is really, really good news if you're invested in the USFL.
You can hear him every week on the sports media podcast with Andrew Marchand of the New York
Post, John Oren. Thanks so much for being here. Chris, I appreciate it. Thanks.
Coming up after the break, Emily Flippen and Ron Gross return with a couple of stocks on their
radar. Stay right here. You're listening to 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 ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear. Welcome back to
Motley Fool Money, Chris Hill here once again with Emily Flippin and Ron Gross. A couple
quick things before we get to radar stocks. Lowe's is teaming up with Petco to test a store
within a store concept. The idea being that pet products such as food and toys, as well as grooming
services will be available at select Lowe's locations. The first one is going to open next
month in Alamo Ranch, Texas. Emily, kind of seems like Petco needs this more than Lowe's,
but what do you think about the idea in general?
Well, this decision really came after 58% of consumers polled, said they'd be more likely
to shop at a home improvement retailer if they could also get pet supplies there too.
And this to me is hilarious because it's true. In fact, why don't we also just expand
it into grocery. I bet even more consumers would come to a home improvement retailer as part
of their weekly stops if they could pick up a carton of milk. And I say this kind of tongue and
cheek, but in my opinion, these partnerships are really just trying to recreate the wheel, right?
We have a second tier pet store, a second tier home improvement retailer, each grasping
at straws here. In my opinion, we have a Home Depot right around the corner and we have
Chewy. Why do we need this?
I'm okay with them giving this a shot, but let's make sure it's,
you know, self-contained over in the upper left-hand corner somewhere because I don't need
animals running around the store as I'm trying to find a screwdriver.
Our email address is Podcasts at Fool.com.
Got a question from Shannon in New Hampshire.
She writes, I'm a long-term investor, and while I'm not enjoying the start of this year,
I'm also not selling my stocks.
Are there any areas of the market looking attractive right now?
I know some unprofitable tech companies have lower valuations, but I'm looking for companies
that are profitable now. Ron, I'm kind of with her.
As am I. It has been a rough start for sure, but I'm glad to hear that there's no selling
going on. You can almost look anywhere and find great companies that have sold off to at least
a certain extent. The SMP 500 down around 8 or 9% this year, NASDAQ even worse at 13%, and
both of those even worse from their 52-week highs. So if you're looking for profitable companies,
you can find some of the best companies that we have, whether it's Costco, Microsoft, Nike, Disney,
Starbucks selling at 15%, 20%, sometimes more discounts to where they were when they were trading
at their highs. So definitely look in that space. There's plenty of great profitable tech companies
that are also down even more as kind of they got thrown out with some of the companies that
are not yet profitable. But don't sleep on those companies that are not
yet profitable. There are still some that look awfully attractive here, maybe the cloud service,
the SaaS companies that will grow into profitability in the future. And you should really
have an allocation to those as well. Emily, what do you think? Anything in particular looking
attractive to you? Well, Shannon's not going to like my answer. And while you can definitely
do worse for yourself than to buy many of the companies we talked about on today's show, right? Microsoft,
Apple being great examples. I actually think that you should be greedy when others are fearful.
And I think the market is a little bit fearful of so-called unprofitable tech companies right now,
which is still, in my opinion, an interesting time to get exposure to those businesses.
And I would remind people not to focus so much on profitability in terms of that net income.
What matters, in my opinion, a lot more is actually cash flow.
And if you look at the cash flow yields of many of these businesses, they are market leading,
industry-leading cash-flow yields.
So focus there.
Let's get to the stocks on our radar.
Our man behind the glass, Dan Boyd, is going to hit you with a question.
Ron Gross, you're up first. What are you looking at this week?
A company that I just took a little position in earlier this week that I'm doing more work on is Garmin G-R-M-N.
They design and build GPS-enabled navigation and communication devices.
They are synonymous with risk-based GPS.
They were a market leader in wearables before the rest of the world took notice and built GPS into basically everything.
It is estimated that Garmin is the divisive choice or about 90% of athletes at major running and cycling events.
Apple, clearly the big boy in this space with their smart watches, but Garmin is a very solid cash producing company, nearly $5 billion in revenue, impressive 59% gross margins,
over a billion dollars evaporating cash flow, strong balance sheet, only priced at 20 times earnings, and they pay a 2.2% dividend.
With Apple as the big boy here, I'm going to dig in and do a little more work.
before I decide if a bigger position is warranted.
Dan, question about Garmin?
Garmin.
Now, that's a name I haven't heard in a while.
Ron, I remember a while ago.
Everybody would have a Garmin in their car for navigation,
but I don't know.
With GPS being built into every new electronic,
is Garmin still relevant?
They are for sure relevant to the tune of $5 billion in revenue a year,
but there is competition here.
I've got my Garmin golf watch, which I absolutely love.
But there are others out there, as I mentioned, Apple.
So you've got to be careful.
Do you get lost on the golf course a lot there, Ron?
If you play like I play, you get lost quite a bit.
Emily Flippin, what are you looking at this week?
A slightly different business than Ron.
I'm looking at Fulgent.
The ticker is FLGT.
They're a genetic diagnostic and testing business
that has experienced a huge boom from COVID testing,
since the start of the pandemic. The stock has been a wild ride reaching a high of just under
$190 a share before plummeting to where it is today, around $60 a share. It's currently
trading at only two times the book value of their shares, and is my opinion being priced as if
COVID testing is going away forever. So if you believe that demand for COVID tests won't ever
fully disappear, I think this could be an interesting time to take a position in Fulgent.
Dan, question about Fulgin genetics?
it seems like this stock price is going back to pre-pandemic levels right now. Would you say that
this is the time to get in on it? I think, yes, is my short answer to that question. I will say
the risk here is that COVID testing is no longer needed. So if you're one of those investors
who believe that COVID testing is going to go away, right? It's not going to become the flu. It's just
going to disappear. That I would certainly not say now is the time to buy fulgent because it can go
lower from here. But I happen to disagree with that.
Emily, am I right, though? It was a testing company long before COVID even reared its ugly
head, and then that gave them this huge boost to their business that wasn't even expected.
So if COVID goes away, they go back to where they were pre-pandemic as a solid company
with strong testing technology.
Yes. To be clear, the business is not all COVID testing, although that is the lion's share
of their revenue right now. They have found ways to pull other testing into their tests, right?
They're combining the flu test and the COVID test now.
If there's a market for that combined test long into the future, I think this could be a great
successful investment.
What do you want to add to your watch list, Dan?
This is a tough one, Chris, because as much as I was making fun of Garmin, it seems like
it's a pretty solid company with $5 billion of revenue.
But genetic testing is also, I mean, it's not going to go away, right?
So I think I'm going to go with Emily on this one, but it's really a toss-up.
Ron Gross, Emily Flippin. Thanks so much for being here. Thanks, Chris.
Thanks, Chris.
That's going to do it for this week's Molly Full Money Radio show. The show is Mixed by Dan Boyd.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. See you next time.
