Motley Fool Money - Time To Hit The Gym Stocks?
Episode Date: January 3, 2023'Tis the season for investing in your physical fitness. (0:21) Jason Moser discusses: - The relative strength of Planet Fitness - How "exercise at home" has been around for decades - Amazon actually ...testing flying drone deliveries in California and Texas (13:45) Dylan Lewis and Asit Sharma discuss what growth stock investors should be considering this year, as well as one business in particular with tailwinds (despite a tough environment). Stocks discussed: PLNT, PTON, AMZN, CRWD Looking for more investing ideas? Go to www.fool.com/report to get your free copy of our "5 Stocks Under $49" report. Host: Chris Hill Guests: Jason Moser, Dylan Lewis, Asit Sharma Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Tim Sparks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Flying delivery drones are finally here.
Yes, really.
Motley Fool money starts now.
I'm Chris Hill, joining me today.
Motley Fool Senior analyst, Jason Moser.
Happy New Year.
Happy New Year to you.
Let's start the first trading day of 2023 by talking about something that so many people focus on in early January,
and that is physical fitness.
Oh, I thought you were going to say taxes or something like that.
No, no.
I don't want to start the year on a downer,
Nobody does. Nobody does. Although, you know, physical fitness isn't necessarily all that fun.
Anyway, you know what? People should just stop listening now. No, I did want to get your thoughts
on this because Chris Rondo, who's the CEO of Planet Fitness, and he's been the CEO for 10 years.
He was on CNBC this morning. And like any responsible CEO, he was talking his own book.
He was talking up the strength of the Planet Fitness business. And when he got Chris, he got
question about Peloton and at-home fitness. I thought he handled it well because he said,
look, there's always been a push for at-home fitness, even invoking Richard Simmons and Jane Fonda
workout video, something that younger listeners might be scratching their head at, but older people
like you and me nod along and say, oh, yeah, I remember that. Oh, yeah. But it prompted me to
sort of look back at the business of Planet Fitness pre-pandemic. And I guess my question for you is,
is this a business that you think is worth a look? Again, there's always enthusiasm for
physical fitness at the start of the year. And, you know, if you can tell me that they're going
to retain a high percentage of the new customers they get, then I think I'm more interested. But
What do you see when you look at the books of Planet Fitness?
You know, I think at first I probably would have said just no full stop.
This is not a business I'm really interested in and just kind of moving forward.
I mean, I'm not anti- Fitness.
Don't get me wrong.
But it is one, to your point, I mean, it is one where it feels like it gets a lot of hype.
Fitness gets a lot of hype at the beginning of the year.
People are making New Year's resolutions and then it kind of fades and then you sort
of hit the reset button and you go back to square one.
the following year. I think in the case of Planet Fitness, though, this is, it is interesting,
I think the story. I think that there is an opportunity there. They quote in their research
that are 80 percent of consumers without a gym membership today. And obviously, that's a lot
of people. One of the things I think we learned through the past couple of years, it's a
lesson probably some of us knew, some of us learned, and for some of us it's been reiterated.
It's to be careful investing with that absolute mindset.
And what I mean by that is saying something like at-home fitness will render gyms obsolete.
I think that was a very easy thing to say over the past couple of years.
But when you take a step back and actually think about it a little bit more deeply, you
realize that's a flawed statement.
That's not really something that's going to play out.
And I think we've seen that through the numbers that Peloton continues to record.
I would call it less than enthusiastic rollout of Apple's fitness product.
I'm sure there are plenty of Apple diehards out there that use it, but it's certainly not making
headlines.
It felt like, over the past couple of years, yeah, at home fitness made a lot of sense.
But you made a very good point there early on. And I'm glad that he mentioned it to in that
interview. You go back to the days when we were kids. We remember, Richard Simmons,
Jane Fott, at home fitness has always existed in some shape or form. So that's not really
new. I think what's new is just, you know, what technology can do to enhance it. And obviously
the equipment side of things that makes it a little bit more compelling in certain cases.
I was thinking about this from the perspective of some LinkedIn data that we used to tout.
Remember when LinkedIn was a publicly traded company and you had LinkedIn and Facebook?
It was sort of the early days of social media.
And we had the social network and the professional network.
And LinkedIn always touted that data that people wanted to maintain separate identities, right?
They wanted their professional lives to be separate from their personal lives.
And that's why LinkedIn didn't feel as threatened by Facebook.
at the time. I think that made sense. I think that's held up rather well. I think it extends
further out too. I mean, over the past couple of years, we've seen the benefits of being
able to live a hybrid lifestyle and get things done when we need to get them, as opposed
to having sort of this siloed existence of work, home, in wherever else you're going to go
throughout your days and your weekends and whatnot. But I do feel like that you do feel like that.
like, and we're seeing this play out and playing at fitness as numbers, people want to go to the gym.
Maybe not everybody, but people want to go to the gym.
Well, and I think that Rondo and his team are smart by really pushing moderation.
Yeah.
You know, one of the things he talked about was we don't want people coming, you know, joining a plan and fitness gym and coming seven days a week.
That's a recipe for burnout.
We want people coming two, three times a week.
week, get a good workout. And that's really the pathway to a longer relationship, which is,
you know, look, there are so many businesses and Planet Fitness is one of them. Part of what
they're dealing with is customer churn. And if you're Rondo, you're looking to get new customers
in and keep them for as long as possible.
Yeah. And I think that's always going to be a challenge for a company like that, for a concept
like Planet Fitness. I mean, churn, I think, is always just going to be part of the beast.
there, unfortunately, but when you look at the actual numbers of this business, I mean,
I was actually pretty impressed. So, I mean, just looking at it from a member's perspective,
for example, I look at their recent 10K, right? And you go back to the end of 2021. They recorded
15.2 million members as of the end of 2021. And that compared to 10.6 million at the end of 2017.
Right? Now, if you look at the end of this third quarter that they just recently reported,
they now stand at 16.6 million members. So that membership is growing. And when you look at the
revenue numbers that they're recording, you go to 2020, they took a, you know, they fell off a cliff
in 2020 for obvious reasons. They recorded 363 million dollars in revenue. But then it started
coming back around 2021, 534 million, right? Trailing 12 months, 7802.2.
million dollars in revenue. So this is a company that continues to grow. And kind of going back
to that 80 percent number that I quoted earlier, I mean, you've got an opportunity
there, 80 percent of consumers without a gym membership. Now, think about this from the perspective
of just economics. I mean, at home fitness is kind of what you make it, right? But a lot
of what it has been made out to be over the past couple of years is buy this killer piece
of equipment, subscribe to our service, and you're set for life. Well, I don't think that's going to work
because I think people are finding more and more, they actually do want to get out.
And I think a lot of people are finding they want to maintain separate professional lives,
separate personal lives, and separate fitness lives, perhaps, as well.
But I think just from the perspective of economics, you can right now join a planet fitness
for $1 down and $10 a month.
I mean, think about the risk that that entails versus buying some $1,000-plus-dollar piece
of equipment. Oftentimes, it's far more than that, even refurbish stuff. So, I mean, the economics
just makes sense from, for the gym perspective versus the at-home fitness. And so then the
consumer has to weigh, right? Is it the convenience that I want? I mean, am I going to just
commit myself to this one piece of equipment? Or would I rather save a lot of money and have
to maybe suck up driving to the gym a couple of times a week? But I'm going to have this whole wide world of
equipment, services, and whatnot that I can benefit from. To me, it's not to say that planet
fitness is just a no-brainer winner, but it certainly presents a very compelling value proposition
for folks who are looking to bring more fitness into their lives.
Let's move on to a future that's been delayed a couple of years, but it appears to
finally be here, and I'm referring to the future of flying drone delivery. Amazon is now
delivering small packages by flying drones in California and Texas. This is a part of the business
referred to as Amazon Prime Air. This is something that I think it was 2016, 2017, that CEO Jeff
Bezos was on 60 minutes touting this. They got the clearance from the FAA in 2020, but now they're
testing it in these rural areas of
California and Texas and I don't know about you but I'm really curious to see where this goes
because I can see this not having a huge material effect on the company's bottom line anytime
soon I can however see you know depending on how the next 12 months goes this could be a
nice little ripple effect in terms of cost controls well yeah you said I think the
key words they're the operative words anytime soon I don't
think this is something that's going to just immediately, boom, just change the outlook for
a company like Amazon, particularly when you consider how big it is now.
But I mean, yeah, to your point, I mean, this is just, this went from like a seed of an idea
in an interview 10 years ago almost to something that's actually now starting to bear fruit.
And as often, as is often the case with Jeff Bezos, I mean, it just takes looking at it from a very long
term perspective, right? That's his forte, is long-term thinking, and this is no different.
For me, I'm excited as a consumer because I think it really does open up a world of possibilities.
I mean, everything is, you know, we are living in an on-demand world. Delivery is just such
a key part of that. I mean, we're seeing FedEx and UPS deal with those challenges. We're seeing
Amazon jump in there to try to capitalize on the opportunity and, you know, soak up some of that excess
demand as well. I love the fact that this is making progress. And I think it has a lot of potential.
It makes sense that they're starting small in areas where it would be relatively easy to manage
because why they say that the drones are autonomous, they're managed by humans, right? I mean,
people are overseeing these deliveries. And that makes all the sense in the world. And so,
I mean, there is going to be a point where you wonder, will the AI or the
machine learning get good enough to where they can scale this because that's ultimately the
goal, right? They got to figure out how to scale this. You can't have 50,000 people monitoring
these deliveries 24-7, which is not cost-effective. It is something that is, there are dangers
involved. I mean, I was reading about one incident here. There was a test site in Oregon.
I mean, a drone fell from the air, 150 plus feet out of the air and started a brush fire that went
across 25 acres. So, I mean, like, that, that's a problem. That didn't go well, right? And
so you're going to have to, you're going to have to contend with all sorts of issues, whether
it's other drones, power lines, whatever. But again, I mean, we were talking about, I mean,
many people were looking at this 10 years ago thinking there was absolutely no way this is going
to work. It's just no, uh-uh, no, it can't, it can't happen. We're seeing that it can happen.
And I mean, he's getting, he's getting the green light from the regulators to at least
try to build this out to some capacity. And maybe it's something that serves more underserved
areas than everywhere, right? But ultimately, I think this is just another example of Amazon's
philosophy, right, of just taking that Uber long-term view, trying things, knowing that not everything
is going to work, but you take lessons away. And again, this is one of those things that really,
really just exists right in their wheelhouse. So I suspect it's something they'll continue
to work very diligently on. And I would imagine we will see this continue to roll out in the coming
years. I think it's consumers you need to be excited about that. And certainly as Amazon shareholders,
you should be excited about it as well.
One more thing to keep our eyes on. Jason Moser. Thanks for being here.
Thank you.
Over the next three days, we're going to be taking a closer look at different categories of
stocks. And what you might want to think about in the year ahead,
if you're considering making an investment.
Today, we're starting with growth stocks.
Dylan Lewis and Asit Sharma discuss new questions they're asking about growth stocks
and one business that still has tailwinds in a tough environment.
I think when you look back at 2022, there are a lot of takeaways in general.
It's been really tough here for the market.
I think there are perhaps more lessons in the growth stock category than almost anywhere else.
When you look back over the past year, what do you think of?
What are your meditations?
on the growth area. Yeah, Dylan, so many big picture things changed that little pieces of investment
theses we were making on growth stocks, those also have changed as well. I sort of think of this
as similar to basketball. In basketball, you've got the three-point shot. You've also got
free throws, which are worth one point. If a team is really great shooting from the outside, you don't
have to worry how good they are at the line when they're making those free throws for one point.
But take that away, suddenly the little things matter more.
And with the change that we've had in interest rates, with inflation being so high, this has
an effect on the way investors value growth stocks.
And there are certain things that you've got to pay a little bit more attention to that
play out in an investment thesis.
And I think that there are probably a lot of listeners that are in a pretty similar
to me, I started investing in 2014, so much of the macro environment that I grew in
to and really learned how to invest in was one of money being relatively easily available
of companies being rewarded for growing their addressable market.
And to some extent, figuring out the bottom line later, what would you give as advice for
this new chapter for a lot of people that maybe haven't lived through some of these periods
before?
Sure, Dylan.
And you know, same with me.
I've been investing for quite a long time, but periods like this will lull you in some
way.
So you'll sort of forget the lessons that you know are there.
have to pay attention to. Let's talk through a few of them. One is something you just touched on,
which is grabbing market share. When interest rates are low and money is flowing, so money's
flowing in the capital markets, investors are gladly putting money into growth stocks. People really
don't care at what cost a company grabs its market share. The idea is at some point down the
road, those cash flows are going to be really valuable if you are investing in a company that's
got very persuasive products and services in the marketplace.
So when that picture changes, the present value of money decreases.
Interest rates go up.
Your dollars are worth less in the future.
You start to pay attention.
How much is this company really spending to grab that market share?
Is it running at a big loss?
Because if money is worth less, those future dollars are going to be worth less to me.
Maybe I don't want to pay so much for that stock today.
Another thing I think we should be more in tune with in the gross stock arena, and I'll say here,
so many growth stocks are technology-oriented, if not tech stocks themselves, is what kind of
yield on your R&D spend, your research and development spend are you getting?
When times are flush, most investors just want to see that a company is spending more and more
on research and development as it's increasing its sales.
But in a time like this, we have to see, well, okay, what are you getting for that?
that spend? Are you churning out additional products and services at a regular cadence?
Are you increasing your competitive edge? That's very important. Just a few more that I think
will make sense to many investors. What is the clarity of future cash flows? In other words,
I know this company is going to generate cash flows in the future. Look how it's growing.
It is conquering its market. But if I can't see the bottom line return on those revenue dollars,
And I should take a pause in an environment like this. I shouldn't just blindly invest in a company.
I should be able to see that they're going to be able to scale with profit and generate lots
of cash flow, generate profits according to generally accepted accounting principles or gap.
And just a couple other things. The quality of the customer base becomes more important when
money starts to curb a bit in terms of investment. You don't want to get as many as customers
as possible, if you are in the growth stock arena, fewer hands with deeper pockets makes a lot
of sense. You can grow a lot easier that way. And then finally, I'll say to me, something that's
very important in an environment like this is to not simply be a challenger company, but to have a
path where you can be a dominant top one, two, or three company in your particular niche or
industry, because when you have that, that points to the stability of those cash flows in the
future. You've already achieved the status where you're now deflecting competition rather than
being a scrappy upstart that is maybe generating losses now to get there. So you tilt
a little bit more to the companies that are more clearly becoming these dominant type
of companies.
Now, Asit, I'm sure there are some listeners that are like me, staring at the brokerage
account, seeing that there are businesses that maybe a year ago, they absolutely love.
Now, maybe they like or love a little bit less, are some of those growth names, but maybe aren't
profitable.
At what point are you willing to accept a business not being profitable?
Where does that spend go?
You mentioned R&D before.
How are you trying to assess a business that maybe doesn't have cash coming in in the way that
investors are currently rewarding, but you're willing to accept it because it's checking
other boxes?
I think for companies that are clearly obtaining that market position.
and maybe have a reason to show big losses on their income statement.
It can make sense.
And here, many of you will already see where I'm head with this.
We're thinking about stock-based compensation.
If you know that a company is having a lot of its SBC,
in other words, offering a lot of stock-based compensation to software engineers,
to very high-level salespeople, they're building out of direct sales force, for example,
that can be acceptable.
A company which is sort of throwing money at their whole equation and being indiscriminate with how they use that stock-based compensation can be a red flag, frankly, because it means that that true operating cash flow is never going to be that strong.
So it's, again, a question of quality.
That's a case where I think I can be a little more comfortable with a company that has losses today.
When we think about the macro picture, which is certainly affecting all of this, there's something else that comes to mind.
and that is the fact that uncertainty is the defining feature of the macro picture right now.
And that means that you and I probably are being more careful with what we spend,
as we see the price of milk going up.
But businesses are too, right?
They're pulling back on their spends.
So where I see a company that has something businesses must purchase,
digital transformation services is one that I'm particularly fond of,
but cybersecurity is another.
you can feel a little more comfortable if a company is reaching that dominant position, but still
generating losses because people have to have that product or service.
So, given everything that's happened over the last year, so I think the Vanguard growth index is
down 30 plus percent over the last year. By comparison, I think their value index is down about
5 percent over the last year. It would be easy, I think, for people to swear off growth names,
especially because some of the individual stocks in that category are seeing much bigger declines
from all-time highs. My confidence isn't shaken in the space. I feel like personally, I'm just
refining the approach a little bit. Is that how you and the Stock Advisor team are tending to think
about it? For sure. At Stock Advisor, we have two recommendations every month, month in, month out.
We are always looking for great businesses. We're looking to re-recommend some of our favorite
names that have been beaten up. One of the reasons for this is that you dollar cost average
in a down market, integrate companies.
It's so hard to see the future when you've gone through a year like 2022.
Your mind gets in the weeds, your soul gets in the weeds.
You look at that brokerage account, it's all in red.
But the ability for us to be able to see past that five years from today,
10 years from today, if we could jump to those points today,
we'd wish in hindsight that we had taken advantage of the opportunity
to buy some of these businesses at a really great point to average.
average out our cost basis, and that leads to those future returns. So it's more about
tweaking the approach, being a little bit more rational, looking at some of the things I talked
about earlier, still buying great businesses. Being a steady buyer in the market is extremely
important. It's not about shying away from growth stocks. One thing history shows us is that
growth stocks drag the market down, but they're also the most resilient on the way back up.
And those are times where many investors wish they hadn't stopped buying those quality, high-growth
companies.
If Ositz's impassioned plea right there got you hooked and you are not swearing off growth stocks,
don't worry. We have a growth stock idea for you. We're going to talk about a business that you feel
like checks a lot of the boxes for a quality growth company, even in this kind of tougher macro
environment that we're in. And that's CrowdStrike. Why was this a business that you wanted to
surface as kind of a best-in-class growth company?
So CrowdStrike, number one, Dylan, it plays in the cybersecurity arena.
And I mentioned that when companies are pulling back on spend, it's a very, very strong idea to buy those companies that people can't ignore.
And you really can't ignore the need to have endpoint security within your organization to protect your network.
There are so many different facets to cybersecurity that you have to pay attention to as a business in this networked work.
I think it's fun that CrowdStrike itself has a yield on its R&D, which is easy to see.
The company has no less than seven different services within this Falcon platform, which is a sort of crowdsourced platform that serves billions of data points every day.
And everyone who is a member of CrowdStrike services, everyone who subscribes to their services, gets the benefit of this data collection.
and identification of new threats.
So we see that yield on the R&D spend.
In addition, crowd strikes products are extremely sticky.
If you look at their most recent quarterly report, Dylan,
they say that subscription customers that have adopted five or more or six or more,
or even seven or more of their modules,
equals 60%, 36% and 21% of their customer base respectively.
So as time goes on, they're selling within their platform without much effort.
Every upsell you can do to a current customer obviously is a more efficient spend
versus going out and getting a new customer.
And this goes back to those favorable unit economics I was talking about at the very beginning
of our conversation.
You want to grab market share at a reasonable cost.
The other things that we like about it in Stock Advisor are just the growth rate.
The fact that this company is growing its revenue, its gross profit at a 50% plus year-over-year
cadence.
It's obviously becoming dominant in its industry.
Lastly, I will say what's so important in this day and age in this high inflation, high
interest rate environment, is that they've got extremely vigorous cash flow.
They do have gap net losses.
When you look at actual free cash flow, you take away some of the non-cash expenses, like that
stock-based compensation. The cash flow yield on this company is really attractive. In this most
recent quarter, their cash flow is extremely impressive. In this most recent quarter, the company
generated 30% free cash flow yield in comparison to revenue. So for every revenue dollar, 30% of that
became free cash flow.
So, to summarize, Osset, strong relationship with their customers, decent cash flow, and improving
business economics, and they are at a crucial crossroads for most businesses right now. It's
spend that will not be going away anytime soon.
Very well stated, Dillan, I wish I could have said that so simply.
Well, I got to summarize it. I got the easier job here.
CrowdStrike is not only a best-in-class growth company from the Stock Advisor team. It's also
one of the businesses that the Stock Advisor team put together as part of a report for 15 stocks to
kickoff 2023. That report and a member event that will be tomorrow hits growth, dividend, value,
energy, and multi-bagger categories of stocks. If you want more stock ideas and you're not a member,
don't worry. We're going to be doing a stock idea every single day this week, checking different
boxes. You'll be hearing about dividend and value opportunities later in the week. And if you
want the full rundown on companies from the stock advisor team, just become a stock advisor member.
You can check things out. The member event will be available for replay. Asit, thank you so much
for bringing this company to our listeners. And thank you for all you do.
Thanks a lot, Dylan. This was a great conversation.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about,
and the Mountain Fool may have formal recommendations for or against.
So, don't buy yourself stocks based solely on what you're here.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
