Motley Fool Money - Kim K, Crypto, and Porsche's IPO
Episode Date: October 3, 2022What are the chances the stock market makes a 4th-quarter comeback? (0:21) Jason Moser discusses: - The chances of the S&P 500, down more than 20% year-to-date, rising over the last 3 months of the y...ear - How the market tends to do worse the year before a recession - Kim Kardashian agreeing to pay $1.2 million to settle charges from the SEC she failed to disclose payment for touting crypto on Instagram (12:21) Dylan Lewis and Brian Feroldi take a closer look at Porsche, which was recently spun off from Volkswagen. Got questions about stocks? Call the Motley Fool Money Hotline at 703-254-1445. Stocks discussed: META, P911, VWAPY Host: Chris Hill Guests: Jason Moser, Dylan Lewis, Brian Feroldi Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Tim Sparks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone, I'm Charlie Cox.
Join us on Disney Plus as we talk with the cast and crew of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again.
What haven't you gotten to do as Daredevil?
Being the Avengers.
Charlie and Vincent came to play.
I get emotional when I think about it.
One of the great finale of any episode we've ever done.
We are going to play Truth or Daredevil.
What?
Oh boy.
Fantastic.
You guys go hard, man.
Daredevil Born Again, official podcast Tuesdays,
and stream season two of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again on Disney Plus.
Here's a tip for all you entrepreneurs out there.
If you're getting paid to promote crypto, you might want to disclose that little fact to the
SEC.
Motley Fool Money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill, joining me today.
Motley Fool Senior analyst, Jason Moser.
Happy Monday.
Happy Monday indeed.
It is a happy Monday.
It's the first day of the fourth quarter.
The market's up, which is great because the month of September was terrible.
The S&P 500 was down 9.3%.
It was the worst month since March of 2020.
And even with the 2% rise that we're seeing today, really that just means the year-to-date.
The S&P 500 is only down 24%.
Yeah.
So fourth quarter comebacks are always popular in the world of sports.
How are you feeling about the prospect for a fourth quarter comeback?
In 2022 for investors.
So the prospect, I mean, listen, we could flip a coin and who really knows.
I guess, so for me, I don't really expect to see some sort of turnaround, right?
I mean, I think there's a lot of writing on the wall that means we, that's telling us we still
have some stuff to get through.
I mean, for me, I think you should continue to expect volatility.
I think it's worth continuing to pay attention to the disparity between the two and 10-year
your treasuries, right? I mean, we don't typically go that macro on our decision-making,
right? But I think understanding sentiment is at least helpful, particularly in a time like
this, and like it or not, the disparity between the two and ten right now. That is an indicator
of sentiment. We have two Fed meetings left in this year. Two more early on next year.
I think those are meetings that will get far more attention than they normally would. I start
to wonder if we won't see the Fed. I don't expect to see. You hear that word pivot, I think,
being thrown around these days. Like, will a Fed pivot now and try to get things back to a little
bit more normal? I don't know that we should expect something like that. Now, I do think that
they may consider taking their foot off the gas a little bit in order to start letting these
recent rate hikes play their way through the economy to see what kind of impact they're having.
I mean, it's not reasonable to expect rate hike and then the next day inflation abates, right?
That's not how it works, right?
There is a little bit of a lag there.
But I think as we go into earnings season, right, I think we're going to see margin pressures
continue as companies continue to deal with costs, but we're also cycling through a difficult
stretch here.
So to me, looking at the guidance beyond these results, you start to wonder if maybe that guidance
starts to become a little bit more palatable, because depending on how that macro picture shapes
up, that could portend a more encouraging 2023, even when you had everyone calling for a recession
now.
Bank of America had a note out this morning looking at the data for situations like we find
ourselves in now, which is to say the S&P 500 is down more than 20% through the first nine
months of the year.
And they noted that with the exception of 2008,
things got better over the last three months.
Now, that's encouraging to me, Jason, right up until the point that I look at,
well, when did this happen? When did we find ourselves in this situation?
And first of all, it hasn't happened that often. And other than 2008,
it only happened four times in history. And those four times were 2002, 2001,
1974 and 1962.
I appreciate the data, but I, you tell me, Jason, I look at this and I think, I don't think
this is particularly relevant, just because the world of investing is so different today, even
compared to 20 years ago, never mind 50 and 60 years ago.
Yeah, I mean, there's no question.
Things have changed a lot in a short period of time.
And I tend to agree to you.
I don't know that if I find that information, all that relevant.
I mean, we were talking side of desk the other day at the office, right?
And we were looking at those charts and kind of looking at 2008 year to date versus
2022 year to date.
And then looking at how 2008 finished out to say, okay, well, maybe this is how
2022 could finish out.
And I think one of the reasons we were entertaining that notion is 2008.
That was a time, that was a very, obviously, unique time.
And then there were some fundamental issues.
at play in regard to the economy, right? I mean, there was obviously massive bailouts going
on in the mortgage-backed securities market. There was a lot of money pumped into the economy
in order to address a lot of failures. There was a lot of money pumped into the economy here in
2020 and 2021 over COVID, right? And I mean, at some point, you have to pay the Piper there,
right? At some point, you have to deal with that. And so I kind of look at 20, I kind of
to look at 2008 is perhaps a little bit more applicable, at least, as a possibility, which
leads me to think that I don't know that I would look at the rest of 2022 in hope for some
kind of a turnaround. I feel like we're still kind of really kind of getting past, kind of
getting through this hangover of all of this capital that's been pumped through the economy.
And the one encouraging thing, and I've mentioned this data point before, and it's just something
to keep in mind, right?
I mean, we've looked at these last two quarters and we saw economic contraction, and so now
we have this debate going back and forth between some.
Are we in a recession now or not?
I mean, of course, we met the two consecutive quarters of contraction, but there are other
qualifiers there that didn't really come into play.
And so it seems like most folks would argue we're not in a recession.
it's like a recession light, I don't know, but the one thing to keep in mind is that,
generally speaking, like historically, stocks perform worse in the year leading up to the recession.
And I think that matters because if in 2023 we actually do see more of these qualifiers
hit in a recession is declared, right? And that ultimately is it, right? It's kind of perception
as everything. If it's declared, then at least you know it's declared. We were seeing more and more
banks getting on board with calling for a recession at some point in 20203. Well, maybe this
stretch that we're witnessing right now, that we're enduring right now, maybe this is sort of
that storm before the commerce sees, hopefully at some point next year. So it's all to say
that these are parts of cycles. We endure them as investors. But again, I mean, these are the
reasons why we invest the way that we do here, because trying to make investing decisions based
on macroeconomic events, it's just difficult to do sustainably well.
You're trying to predict the future, and that's just, you can't do that sustainably well.
From the stock market, we go to the crypto market.
Kim Kardashian has agreed to pay a one and a quarter million dollar fine to settle charges
from the SEC that she failed to disclose the fact that when she was touting Ethereum
Max's cryptocurrency on Instagram to her 330.
million followers, she was actually being paid to do that.
If you're someone who is genuinely bullish on crypto, you've got to be happy about this, don't
you?
Aren't you happy about the fact that the SEC is, I mean, in this case, it's Kim Kardashian.
She's certainly not the only celebrity or influencer out there being paid to tout crypto.
I think if you're bullish on crypto, you're probably happy about this, aren't you?
I would think, to me, this seems like something you'd want to see if you believe in the long-term
opportunities of crypto in general. I mean, nothing against Kim Kardashian. I'm sure she's
a bright woman. I mean, you have to be to have generated that kind of wealth. Doing
something right. By the same token, I mean, I have a hard time believing that she's fully
schooled on the intricacies of the crypto market, right? I mean, I don't know that a whole
lot of people really are. I mean, we have some people out there that love to tout that they are, but
it's still very difficult to fully wrap your head around.
And so, I mean, what we've seen over the last couple of years, it's really been a money grab,
right? From the Super Bowl commercials to just the incessant commercials that you see on
CNBC, for example, right?
I mean, so if you extend it beyond just her, I mean, like I said, this is a money grab.
All of the celebs and athletes getting behind it, I mean, it feels pretty clear that they don't
really know what it is or the risks involved. I mean, they're just taking the money. And I don't
blame them for that, but there are rules that you got to adhere to. Right? I mean, the SEC
is saying, like, you can't just hashtag ad and say, well, I've disclosed it, right? I mean,
you actually have to disclose with the SEC a figure, right, that you're being paid to do this.
And to me, the challenges with the crypto market, and you're going to have people out of
that are all for it, and you get people that are all against it.
I think most people know I'm a little bit more glass, half empty on it.
It's just not something I can fully wrap my head around, and so it's not something I am ever going to really pursue.
But you could argue that it's very much a business model that depends on people pumping it in order to get more people in on buying it, right?
Sort of that greater fool argument.
It's only really worth as much as the next personal pay you for it, right?
And so these ad campaigns that we've seen so much of over the last year, I mean, these ad campaigns
that focus on younger folks, they still have that inclination to do what celebs and athletes
tell them they should do.
I mean, that opinion carries more weight, particularly when you're younger, as opposed to older.
And investing has become more accessible now than ever before.
And so you see this massive interest in crypto in a particularly younger demographic.
It seems like the older demographic takes it with a little bit more of a healthy dose of skepticism.
So I think these are important things, right?
There needs to be credence lent to this market if there is to be long-term success in this market.
I don't know that there will be.
For me, it does feel like there is some sort of staying power for some part of it.
Maybe it's Bitcoin or some combination of assets.
But I kind of liken it to penny stocks versus stocks, right?
We hear at the full, we love stocks, but we issue penny stocks, right?
We tell people to stay away from penny stocks because of their speculative nature.
And so crypto, I kind of look at it at the same way.
We're starting to see maybe this bifurcation of sort of the more established crypto markets
and then the penny stock version of crypto markets.
And so if there is going to be a long-term future for the crypto markets, then you definitely
want to see, you want to see more.
rules. You want to see more adherence to rules and you want governing bodies to lend credence
to it. So from that perspective, it seems like this is probably the right call.
Jason Moser, always great talking to you. Thanks for being here.
Thank you. If you're thinking there haven't been as many IPOs lately, you're right.
So why did Porsche IPO when so many other businesses are choosing to wait?
Dylan Lewis and Brian Faraldi take a closer look at the luxury auto.
automaker being spun off by Volkswagen.
We have shares of Porsche hitting the public markets last week.
This was a big debut, big debut for a variety of reasons.
The new public market has been kind of dry recently, as we just talked about.
But also, this was one of the biggest public issuances in recent history in Europe.
I think it was one of the largest of the last couple decades.
Porsche, for most of our listeners, probably not a name that needs a ton of introduction.
But I think we can just kind of talk through a little bit of where they sit in the auto market.
and some of the market dynamics there, Brian.
Yeah, so Porsche's a name that everybody listening is certainly heard of, and I certainly knew
that they were a car maker.
I was surprised about some of the numbers that they threw out, though.
So I knew that this as a luxury brand.
I didn't realize how luxury of a brand this was and just how few cars they are making when
compared to some of their competitors.
Yeah, the dynamics are pretty incredible.
I mean, if you look at the model pages on the website, you can kind of get a sense.
start a lot of their models in the 70K range. And I'd say that they have some models that are
kind of in that approachable luxury range, but they get pretty unapproachable pretty quick. They get
into the six figures pretty quickly. And so they kind of live in the same place in the market
that you start to see people thinking about Tesla and Maserati, maybe not quite in the lane of
the Ferrari, who's another public company that's a luxury competitor. But Brian, that's all to say.
Their customers are pretty well-heeled. And when you're thinking about overall volume, they are not
someone who is making millions of cars a year. This is a company that is making generally hundreds
of thousands of cars a year. And despite that they're making so relatively a modest amount of cars,
this is a company that came public at a pretty sizable market cap. In fact, it actually
is close to rivaling the market cap of the company that it's being spun out of.
Yeah. So, as I understand it, I think the numbers might change a little bit, but Porsche is now the
fifth largest automaker in the world that's public behind Tesla, Toyota, BYD, which is a Chinese
auto company, and its former parent company Volkswagen, which is incredible because it is within
spitting distance of its former parent company.
Current market cap, it's fluctuated a little bit since the company's gone public, but around
$75 billion, which is more or less where Volkswagen currently lives, and that's on a fraction
of the overall revenue that its parent company has.
Well, we are public market investors, and we don't really care about unit volume.
What investors care about, Dylan, is revenue and profits and margins.
And when it comes to those things, Porsche definitely has the leg up on many, many of its competitors.
It does. And that's really where being in the luxury space sets it apart from a lot of the other carmakers out there.
I mean, they ship a fraction of what the likes of Ford and GM do, but they do it at a much higher operating profit.
In their case, typically in the mid-to-high teens, and they're saying maybe we could even get up into the 20% range,
that offers a little bit more of a compelling business model than a lot of the traditional automakers.
I do think, though, Brian, automaking, it's just hard.
It's a tough business in general, and being an elite automaker and still only having 15 to 20 percent operating margins really speaks to that.
It's an incredibly tough business made all the more tough by the fact that right now we are in the midst of an automobile revolution.
The shift to electrification of vehicles is fully underway.
We are still in the early endings, and this is both a big opportunity for companies like Porsche, but also a massive.
massive threat. Yeah. Anytime I see something like this where we have a company that is,
you know, formerly a subsidiary and then kind of coming out and being isolated at its own public
company, I always wonder, okay, why? What is the story? What's the narrative that's being spun by
management? And what we heard was that basically we want to create some capital to help us focus on
electromagn mobility initiatives. And so that's getting at electrifying the fleet and having more
offerings that are EVs. Right now, I'd say Porsche is primarily a
legacy automaker that is working its way into electrification, like so many of the others.
It does have some EVs out there, and they have some very ambitious goals about where they want to go with it.
They say by 2030, they want to have about 80% of the new vehicles with an all-new electric power train,
which is incredible. It's a great goal to have. Right now, I believe, 23% of all vehicles delivered were electrified in recent quarters.
So they have a ways to go with that. But that seems to be where they want to be putting this money that they're getting.
in addition to some shareholder enrichment from the people who have formerly owned shares or formerly owned the company by way of Volkswagen.
Yeah, that 23% number certainly stood out to me that was much higher than I thought it was going to be.
Notably, they say that 23% of their vehicles delivered last year were electrified.
That doesn't mean they are fully electric.
Only 14% of their cars were fully electric.
The delta there would be for hybrids, which is the company considers to be electrified.
But still, that's a higher percentage that I thought the company is going to stay at this stage of the game.
Yeah, and I think it's an important part of the narrative for almost any automaker at this point.
I think we're all pretty much on the same page.
EVs are the future, and we've seen it with the lofty market caps that a lot of EV-focused companies have been getting.
You can understand how all of these other automakers want to get into the mix.
So we know that some of the money raised is going to go towards funding those efforts.
Some of the money raised is going to go by way of a special dividend to Volkswagen shareholders,
which, Brian, I have to say is a little confusing because we were kind of sorting through the
corporate structure for this deal, trying to understand exactly where ownership lied.
And one of the things that was most confusing to me, as we were kind of batting this around,
is realizing, okay, Porsche has a $75 billion-ish market cap.
Volkswagen has roughly a $75 billion market cap.
Volkswagen owns 75% of Porsche.
So, is most of the valuation there driven entirely by the company's equity stake in Porsche?
That seems bizarre to me.
That is what the numbers suggest, and that definitely had us scratching our heads at first,
but it's really when you dig into the capital structure of Volkswagen that the numbers start
to make sense.
Yes, Volkswagen's market cap is around $75 billion, but that's not the only way to measure
the size of the business.
Another way is using what's called enterprise value.
That's when you also factor in a company's debt and cash, and when you look at that number,
the valuation numbers make much more sense.
Yeah, and I'm surprised because this is a company that has a balance sheet in the hundreds
of billions of dollars.
And I would think, given that they're having a capital injection here, we might use
some of that money to shore up the company's balance sheet and make it a little bit healthier.
That doesn't really seem to be the route that they're going, though.
They are paying out half of the proceeds from this deal as a special dividend to their shareholders.
That makes very little sense to me. To your point, your point, Volkswagen is facing a existential crisis right now, given the electrification.
And they are going to need billions upon billions of dollars poured into their company in order to electrify their fleet, to build out a charging network, and to really make this transition happen.
The fact that they're spinning off Porsche to turn that into cash does make sense to me.
What I'm scratching my head about is, why are they then giving this money to shareholders
when they should be using that capital themselves to accelerate their plans to electrify their fleet?
If you're looking for other reasons as to why this deal is happening and why the spin-outs
happening, I think just in understanding the dynamics of market cap and relative size of these
businesses, you realize Porsche is probably a little bit more of an attractive business than folks
so I get at this point. And often you'll see companies do this so that the more attractive
business is not weighed down by the business that either doesn't have as attractive a business
model in financials or is saddled with some things that make it very hard for the true
player to shine in the company. Yeah. When you look at the market caps of these two companies,
it's clear that the market was not valuing the Porsche being held up by Volkswagen when it
was purely behind the scenes. Now that it spun out, there could be a re-rating of Volkswagen's
position to account for its massive ownership sake in Porsche. It's even possible that over time,
that might be willing to take even more of their ownership and sell it to public investors,
given the results that we've seen so far. That could be a way for them to raise capital down
the road should they choose to. So when I dig into that, I think that this spinoff makes sense.
We talked about how we were a little unsure of the use of capital with this deal.
I think one thing also to be mindful of with this deal, Brian, is these are related companies,
and they're going to continue to be related companies, both in how the shares are held
and also who is running the show at these companies.
It's going to be the same guy.
That's correct.
Oliver Bloom is the CEO of both Volkswagen and Porsche.
He's going to be the CEO of two public-putated automakers at the same time.
necessarily, that has some investors raising question marks about his ability to truly remain
independent and make decisions for both companies.
But so far, he's been playing down that threat, but that is certainly something for
investors to watch.
So, Brian, when you take a step back and look at everything we just detailed here,
I know we didn't go super far into the numbers, but what do you see?
Is this an interesting investable idea?
Is this something you're watching?
Where does it sit for you?
This is a company that I had no interest in prior to looking at the numbers.
and I am slightly more interested after we see it.
There is some good things to see in Porsche.
It's financially very strong.
It's profitable.
It has a very strong customer base.
In fact, the company actually grew its revenue throughout the pandemic.
It's further along in electrification than most of its peers.
And its balance sheet is going to be in pretty good shape when compared to that.
However, I don't see a ton of upside potential here.
I don't like the dual class, the dual CEO role. The ownership structure here is very complex,
and is also just still question marks around the EB transition. Management is telling a rosy story
about what a tailwind is going to be for the business, but I'm more skeptical than that.
So this is a company that wouldn't interest me anyway. So I think it is going to be a decent business,
and I understand why some investors are interested in it. But for me, though, it's a pass.
Yeah, I think that makes sense. To me, I'd put it in the worth studying bucket,
it mostly because when you see a company that is capable of finding margin in an industry
where a lot of companies can't, it's always worth understanding how they do that, and whether
that's something that can be brought to the rest of the industry or if it's a unique competitive
advantage. In this case, the growth profile of this company is just something that I'm not
as interested in. We're generally looking at single-digit year-over-year growth. The margins
are good for the industry, but not as good as we can see elsewhere.
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. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
