From Individual Investor
What?s Barnes & Noble?s Spin-Off Really Worth?
individualinvestor.com By Steve Smith 11/4/99
Thanks to the sky-high valuations the equities market is awarding Internet companies, it?s no surprise that everyone from Barnes & Noble (NYSE: BKS - Quotes, News, Boards) to the local pickle merchant is trying to monetize their Web potential.
Can you blame them?
The stock spin-off has become a favored tactic for a parent company that wants to retain a sizable, but minority, stake in the subsidiary.
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You can almost picture management at the parent company thinking to themselves, ?Hey if Wall Street loves small revenue coupled with huge losses, well, we can deliver that profile.?
This has resulted in some intriguing stock valuations in which an Internet spin-off?s market cap swells disproportionately to the original core operation. We?ve looked at several of these scenarios, such as Ziff-Davis? (NYSE: ZD - Quotes, News, Boards) spin-off of ZDNet (NYSE: ZDZ - Quotes, News, Boards) and IDT Corp?s (NASDAQ: IDTC - Quotes, News, Boards) stake in the then surging Net2Phone (NASDAQ: NTOP - Quotes, News, Boards), in which we flirted with the notion that the core business is undervalued relative to the new issue and thus a ?buy.?
Such an investment thesis was arrived at by subtracting or backing out the core company?s ownership stake in the new issue from the parent?s current stock price. The result has left the core business looking very cheap by nearly all conventional ratios, such as price to earnings, price to sales or price to book.
Unfortunately, there are few examples where this strategy has played out, and we think we?ve come up with at least a partial explanation by looking at Barnes & Noble and its 41% stake in barnesandnoble.com (NASDAQ: BNBN - Quotes, News, Boards).
The market currently values the holding at $1.1 billion or $15.90 per share. If you subtract that from Barnes & Noble?s $1.5 billion market capitalization and share price of $21.58, it values the core business at just $431 million or $6.12 per share.
At Wednesday?s close, Barnes & Noble was down $0.50 to $21.44, and barnesandnoble.com was up $0.19 to $18.44.
But Barnes & Noble is expected to earn $1.18 per share in 2000 and $1.47 per share in 2001. That would mean the parent company is trading at just 5.3 times next year?s earnings once barnesandnoble.com is factored out. Yet Barnes & Noble has a projected growth rate of more than 20% for the next three years.
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Several analysts who have ?buy? recommendations on Barnes & Noble are baffled.
Amy Ryan of Prudential Securities sees no flaw in the valuation procedure. She says ?The core business is strong, and the market is telling me that its 144 million share stake is worth x amount of dollars. I translate that into a per share contribution. Barnes and Noble is cheap at these levels.?
Jason Klein, an analyst with Blackford Securities Corp., says that before the barnesandnoble.com initial public offering, ?We were reluctantly segregating the two businesses to get a better handle on the core business?s value. Now, with the online business operating as a separate company, we feel this method is not only appropriate, but the best method for valuing shares based on current business projections.?
But Klein also issues this caveat, barnesandnoble.com?s ?shares may be overvalued. We are taking a conservative valuation approach by saying that barnesandnoble.com should trade about 10 times sales.?
Klein bases his valuation of barnesandnoble.com by comparing it to Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN - Quotes, News, Boards), which is currently trading at 13 times sales. Barnesandnoble.com is trading a 14 times sales. In addition, Klein is assuming that losses don?t accelerate beyond the $0.05 per share loss from last quarter.
Klein?s approach sounds good. But there?s another problem with valuing barnesandnoble.com, and here it is ? liquidity.
Jim Jordan, an analyst with Southwest Financial Analytics, explains that if Barnes & Noble, the parent, went to sell its 40% stake, it would cause ?massive downward pressure on the stock.? This has led Jordan to place a ?blockage discount? on barnesandnoble.com?s shares. He figures that the current price, shares would fall some 20% for every 15% of stock released to the float.
For many companies, common stock has become a form of currency, but its value is fleeting. As soon as more supply hits the market, or if a holder of the asset tries to translate it into cash, the individual share value plummets.
Another factor working against barnesandnoble.com is that it is in the unfortunate position of competing against its parent company in a relatively slow growth market. The book industry is expected to grow at a 7% clip for the next five years. That means that if Barnes & Noble and barnesandnoble.com are to maintain their current growth rates, they?ll be cannibalizing one other?s business.
It?s also worth noting that Barnes & Noble announced on Tuesday that it had bought a 49% stake in iUniverse.com, a privately held company that publishes paperback versions of new and out-of-print books. The company?s publications are sold both through traditional retailers and Web sites. Barnes & Noble will use its marketing clout to support iUniverse.com.
Bottom Line: On the surface, Barnes & Noble may still look cheap, but the difficulty in measuring barnesandnoble.com?s fair market value knocks out one possible reason for liking this stock. Still, if you think Barnes & Noble is a good company, go ahead and buy its shares based on the core business alone. Don?t expect the Internet spin-off to contribute to the upside. |