Coinstar Investors Counting Pennies That Don’t Exist
Coinstar (CSTR) primarily operates self-service coin counting and self-service DVD rental kiosks at retail locations. You drop in a piggy bank full of coins in one of their machines, and you get cash in notes (discounted value) or a gift card. Coinstar’s trucks go around collecting the coins, so the recent increase in fuel costs is a negative for the company.
Market cap: $1 billion; EV: $1.3 billion
Coinstar is a company that has been a perpetual turnaround, with almost every year (including 2008) being described as a transition year. The company has been acquiring other companies, and recently increased its ownership stake in a subsidiary resulting in consolidation of the subsidiary’s accounts, so the numbers and growth rate it is reporting are not comparable to the previous year.
The company is estimated to earn $0.60 per share (pro-forma) this year and $1.05 next year. The earnings estimate for next year looks overly aggressive, and to me it seems almost impossible to achieve. At $36, the stock is trading at 60x ’08 EPS! And even if it were to meet next year’s earnings estimate, that’s still a rich 34x multiple for something that’s very uncertain. Earnings quality is poor, with the company pro-forma’ing out stock compensation, intangible amortization and occasionally asset write-downs. Over the last 12 months, the company has generated no cash, and in fact free cash flow has been negative. D&A is running above capex, and working capital has been consuming cash.
The risks to the business are many. Some regional banks are installing coin counting machines that their customers can use for free. Self-service DVD kiosks are a novelty whose days are numbered under the onslaught of Netflix and online movie distribution. One long term risk is that with a penny costing more than a penny to manufacture, it is possible that the US Mint will phase out the coin. This would result in less need for Coinstar’s services.
The company was in an ongoing battle with an activist shareholder (Shamrock), and is currently in some kind of truce, having appointed one of Shamrock’s nominees to its Board. Some investors piggyback on activist fund investments, thinking that the outcome is bound to be positive. This is a dangerous strategy. An activist shareholder can ensure a company deploys its cash flow productively, or goad the company to sell itself if there is a willing buyer, but there is little it can do to improve the company’s operations or increase its cash flow. Note Carl Icahn’s failures at Blockbuster (BBI) and Motorola (MOT). Or even Shamrock’s investment in iPass (IPAS), which is down 60% in the last year.
Fair value for CSTR stock: $15 (a generous 25x multiple on ‘08 EPS of $0.60)
Disclosure: Author has a short position in CSTR
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- @VIC: Top Hedge Fund Picks
- Can Google Reach Its Pie in the Sky?
- Our Coming Depression
- CDS Market: It's Crunch Time
- Opportunity in Emerging Markets Amidst This Panic
- iPhone Sales Drastically Surpass Q4 Consensus; Apple Reaches 10m Goal
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- 36 Opportunities for the Beginning of the Bull »
- 25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's »
- 3 Stocks That Are Begging To Be Bought »
- iPhone Sales Drastically Surpass Q4 Consensus; Apple Reaches 10m Goal »
- Iceland: When Too Big to Fail Becomes Too Big to Rescue »
- Cramer: Dow Could Drop Another 14%, Oil's Going to $50 »
- Big Tech Prepares for Big Layoffs »
- Cash Position Best for Apple Investor »
- Why Is Everybody Selling as Buffett Is Loading Up? »
- Fannie and Freddie Did Not Cause This Crisis »
- GE Looks Very Attractive Here »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Dell Looks Cheap
- @VIC: Jeffrey Schwartz of Metropolitan Capital Advisors- Taking What the Defense Gives You
- Fear, Panic & Opportunity in the Markets
- Borders: Interview with CEO George Jones
- Five Investment Principles To Remember Now
- Yesterday's Market: Advantage, Bulls
- Two Currency ETFs For the Resurgent Dollar, Yen
- Unintended Consequences - Fast Money Recap (10/6/08)
- Time To Go Long, For A Short Time?
- Four Energy Bargains
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Michael Page International: Stock Down on Market Weakness
- Gaming Stocks Still a Poor Bet - Barron's
- After Coming Rate Cuts, Some Appealing Short ETFs
- M/I Homes: Common Share Price Perplexing
- Trading ERO This Week
- Talk Me Down From the Wells Fargo Ledge
- SKF Regaining Its Old Form?
- Continuing Haircut in DST's Investment Portfolio
- Fortis and Bradford and Bingley Banks Thrown Lifelines
- The Short Case on KBH Homes
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Time to Hoard Cash - Cramer's Mad Money (10/6/08)
- Buyers On Strike - Cramer's Stop Trading! (10/6/08)
- Still Bullish on RIMM - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/6/08)
- The Cramer Crash?
- Cramer: Dow Could Drop Another 14%, Oil's Going to $50
- Musical Chairs - Cramer's Mad Money (10/3/08)
- Not Much to Recommend - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/3/08)
- Imminent Rate Cut? - Cramer's Stop Trading! (10/3/08)
- American Express to the Sell Block - Cramer's Mad Money (10/2/08)
- Buy Rarely; Sell Repeatedly - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/2/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 10 comments:
shareholder
Second, CSTR is now majority shareholder of Redbox. This startup has captured the #1 share of the movie rental vending machine market and is due to go public this year. The start up loses over the last few years are now going to be monetized in the IPO.
Good luck on your short. I will sell when the stock hits 50 later this yr.
Counting coins seems mundane, but they have used it to build recognition as an entree into the money transfer business. And while a penny may be worth less and less with each passing year, it will most certainly be around for years to come.
Maybe people will start taking their coin jars to turn it into "real money" now that they are feeling so un-confident
but as a value minded investor, the valuation is too rich.
To respond to 'CSTR Shareholder's comment above - <i>of course<i> Redbox has captured the #1 share of the movie rental vending machine market...nobody else is in that market because it's utterly pointless, and they can have it all to themselves in the face of Netflix, cable tv and downloading, both of the pirated and legallly sanctioned kind. Even if a CD-based rental business fantasy can currently manage to eke out some toehold, its days are guaranteed to be critically numbered in the face of the absolutely inevitable trend toward completely virtual media disribution over ever-faster Intenet transmission speeds. Any business model which can't see that one coming is blind a a bat. Look to Netfilx, if nowhere else - they're moving everything, sometimes slowly, sometimes quickly, toward streaming and downloading. RedBox will go the way of the 8TrackTape. So yes, Redbox dominates that market, and I'll breathe a great big sigh of relief that I don't.
As the above article states, where you ever do see 34x-60x PE multiples and there is any attempt to actaully justify them in the light of reason, it's usually for spculative growth companies with phenomenal potential if the bet pays off: say, if they discover the cure for cancer or develop photovoltaic power via a special porces which will make it half as cehap as coal... look at this dog of a stock (a dog with fleas) and honestly tell us it's anywhere within meteor-strike range of that kind of breakthrough profitability. This star seems highly likely to implode.