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Finance 4820-800 – Growth Stock Investing

Finance 4820-800 – Growth Stock Investing. Investment Process and Stock Example Brian Demain, CFA. Who is Janus and who am I?. Janus is a $170B asset manager. Approximately $95B is invested in growth or core equities, managed out of our Cherry Creek HQs

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Finance 4820-800 – Growth Stock Investing

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  1. Finance 4820-800 – Growth Stock Investing Investment Process and Stock Example Brian Demain, CFA

  2. Who is Janus and who am I? • Janus is a $170B asset manager. Approximately $95B is invested in growth or core equities, managed out of our Cherry Creek HQs • I manage the Janus Enterprise Fund, a mid-cap growth fund. Before that, I was an analyst following media, telecom, and internet stocks

  3. What does it mean to be a growth stock investor? • Perception of growth investors as the party animals of the investment world, who love the party while it is going on but are left with a hangover at the end of it. • Real distinction is between value and momentum. Growth investors believe they are buying a good value. Momentum investors believe that a rising stock will continue to rise • Growth investors believe value is created by growth that comes at high returns on capital • Google came public in 2004 at $85, or 60x earnings of $1.40. “Value” investors laughed at this. However, Google will earn about $23 in 2009; it actually came public at 3.7x earnings. Future growth meant that Google was a value stock • Denver is one of the growth investing hubs

  4. Growth stock investing is about returns as much as growth • What are the returns this business generates? • How sustainable are these returns? (Porter’s 5 Forces) • Will returns rise or decline over time? • How will the rate of growth impact returns? • With time and money, can this business model be replicated?

  5. Growth stock investing is about returns as much as growth • Coca Cola (16x earnings) versus Carnival Cruise Lines (13x earnings) • Would you borrow money at 10% to invest in a CD yielding 5%?

  6. Growth stock investing is about returns as much as growth

  7. Growth stock investing is about returns as much as growth • From 2000 to 2009, Medtronic grew its earnings from $1.00 to $2.92, and yet the stock was flat. The P/E multiple has gone from 60x to 15x • Return on Invested Capital went from 23% to 11% due to a large number of acquisitions

  8. How do growth investors find ideas? • Secular themes • Technology • Healthcare • Emerging economies • Industry themes • New technology in old industries • Share shifts • Ideas come from industry knowledge. Talk to companies, suppliers, customers, competitors

  9. Qualitative Research – Learning the Industry • How does the company make money? • Price/volume/mix • What do they sell? • Know the product • What does it cost to make it? • Fixed versus variable costs • Porter’s Five Forces and Return on Invested Capital • Who do they compete with? Consolidated or fragmented industry? • Who are their customers? Is there concentration or fragmentation? How much value do their customers see in the product? • Who are their suppliers? Could suppliers raise prices? • What are the substitutes? Is there a cheaper alternative? Are there new technologies that are potentially disruptive? • What are the barriers to entry? Time? Money? Distribution? Regulatory?

  10. Qualitative Research - Is this a good business? • Predictable and sustainable growth • Competitive advantage • High quality business model – margins and ROIC • Good management

  11. Grassroots Research • Industry conferences • Web boards • Consume the product • Talk to customers/suppliers/competitors/industry experts

  12. Meeting management • Will not (can not) yield great insight into current business trends • Management is responsible for strategy, execution, and capital allocation, and this is important • Yes, you are younger and less knowledgeable about their business than they are. But they work for your clients!

  13. Public Disclosures • SEC filings • 10K • 10Q • Proxy • Website presentations and calls

  14. Quantitative Research – What a Model Should Do • Great is the enemy of good • A model should include income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement, as well as a DCF • What matters in the model? Think in terms of 2-3 leverage points. Price, units, mix, cost structure, capital structure, etc.

  15. Quantitative Research - Absolute vs Relative Valuation • Relative valuation – like winning the NIT • Distortions in bubble periods • No two companies are exactly alike • Great for relative value long/short investing, but not for long term investing • The DCF is a blunt instrument but the best way to measure value that we have

  16. How to Pitch an Idea to a Portfolio Manager • Key levers to an investment thesis – can you pitch the stock in an elevator ride? • Take 3 lines of content and expand, not the other way around

  17. A Specific Growth Stock Example – Crown Castle (ticker: CCI)

  18. Is the wireless tower industry a good business? • Predictable growth • Recurring revenue from investment grade credits • Sustainable growth • iPhones and Blackberries

  19. Is the wireless tower industry a good business? • Competitive advantage • Not in my backyard • High margins and high incremental margins • Little opex • Easier to hang a second antenna than build a new tower • Earnings grow faster than revenue as a result

  20. How we research this industry • Industry conferences • Speak with network engineers • Pour over financials • Meet with management • Talk with competitors • Detailed financial model focusing on leverage points

  21. Valuation • Cash flow, not earnings • Discounted cash flow, not relative valuation • Future growth is important to the valuation. • If we never saw growth again, the stock would be worth much less than the current multiple • Growth, at high incremental margin and returns, and with long duration, is worth a tremendous amount

  22. Tower economics • A single tower costs about $250,000 to build • A tenant pays $19,000 per tower per year, with built-in rent escalators (assume 3% for the sake of this exercise) • Today, the average tower has 3 tenants. Where could this go? • A tower costs $20,000 in fixed costs to operate, and then $1,000 per tenant in variable costs • A tower with ONE tenant generates ($2,000) in cash flow on a $250,000 investment. This has a negative IRR and negative DCF value • A tower with TWO tenants generates $16,000 in cash flow on a $250,000 investment. This has a 6% IRR and $266,000 DCF value • A tower with THREE tenants generates $34,000 in cash flow on a $400,000 investment. This has a 14% IRR and $566,000 DCF value • A tower with FOUR tenants generates $52,000 in cash flow on a $400,000 investment. This has a 14% IRR and $866,000 DCF value • Moving from 1 tenant to 4 tenants over time is growth, with high incremental return on invested capital. A DCF that doesn’t consider this growth will value this business at $566,000 x the number of towers. But each tenant creates $300,000 in value!

  23. Growth stock resources • Peter Lynch’s “Beating the Street” • Joel Greenblatt’s “The Little Book that Beats the Market” • Porter’s “Competitive Strategy” • Ralph Wanger’s “A Zebra in Lion Country”

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