Friday, November 28, 2014

Thanksgiving post - an Australian feast

I am in Wisconsin for my first ever American Thanksgiving.

But a little homesick - so I want to show you how we feast in Australia.

Kitchen Cabinet is a television show in Australia where Annabel Crabb cooks and eats a meal with various politicians to see how they tick.

This is my all-time favourite episode - where Annabel dresses as the African Queen and visits Senator Nigel Scullion in the Northern Territory and "pesters" wildlife.

Remember as you watch this that Nigel Scullion is from the conservative side of Australian politics.

It is a dreamtime feast.

And it proves Australia really is different. Can you imagine an American conservative politician nonchalantly explaining how he and a young woman both wearing underwear happened to wind up chained to a lamp post in St Petersburg?

Or a British politician poaching rabbits from the grounds of Parliament House so he can go home and roast them?

Enjoy...










Thursday, November 6, 2014

Nu Skin results

Nu Skin produced bad results - with sales declining in pretty well every region. These are the sales from the third quarter.

20142013
Revenue:
Greater China$226,744$449,558
North Asia205,488202,390
South Asia/Pacific88,915126,972
Americas76,73784,813
EMEA40,91644,566

Herbalife was punished by the market after a miss which involved positive but falling sales growth rate.

This is far worse.

But that is not what my complaint is about.

The company published its results WITHOUT a cash flow statement.

Call me old-fashioned but I like cash flow statements.

If you try to reconstruct it there is yet another quarter where cash generation does not reconcile with profits.

Also they drew a revolver after quarter end despite having almost $200 million of cash on the balance sheet and not obviously needing any more than the non-revolving part of the credit agreement.

I have no idea why.




John

Disclaimer: Short Nu Skin, unfortunately (yesterday) long Herbalife.

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

That supposed Herbalife miss

Herbalife results was a miss on volume growth. And first I was disappointed - but as I read the 10-Q carefully I became more and more cheered.

The last post outlines what the range of outcomes on Herbalife is.

On the binary issue of the FTC inquiry we have no explicit news. As stated in the last post (and I think most shorts would agree with me) the earnings power of this company is completely secondary to whether the company is allowed to operate.

The real debate which is about the legality of the business model will continue.

The secondary debate is about the profitability of the company.

Most of this post is about the secondary debate - and the entire stock movement is about the secondary debate.

Slowing growth

In the third quarter of 2011 (as the last post makes clear) the company had volume growth like this:

Third Quarter 2011 Regional Key Metrics 2,3,4
Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg
North America252.912.2%58,89715.3%
Asia Pacific261.236.2%51,64438.5%
EMEA132.415.8%39,22716.7%
Mexico180.623.5%49,77225.9%
South & Central America149.739.5%35,99321.8%
China40.32.3%9,53326.3%
Worldwide Total1017.123.4%236,19123.6%
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg
Emerging Markets544.526.9%134,46726.4%
Established Markets472.619.5%109,33919.3%
Worldwide Total1017.123.4%236,19123.6%


This was astounding growth. Normal companies do not grow sales volume at 23.4 percent for long.

In that quarter sales volume (23.4 percent) was very closely correlated to the growth in the number of active sales leaders (23.6 percent). This correlation should be expected.

And whilst the correlation was not perfectly accurate by region - it was pretty close and remained close for a long time.

Over time sales growth slowed. However as recently as the first quarter volume growth was 9 percent (off very big numbers) and sales-leader growth was 11 percent. These are still perfectly adequate numbers.

In the second quarter Herbalife had its first miss in recent years. Here were the numbers for sales growth and volume growth:


Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region2Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg2Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg
North America335.8(1%)75,7725%
Asia Pacific320.21%74,9166%
EMEA218.822%56,69218%
Mexico231.35%64,6563%
South & Central America206.3(7%)62,17214%
China118.538%18,70333%
Worldwide Total1,430.95%340,6449%


The 5 percent sales growth number is by far the worst the company had seen. However active sales leaders continued to grow at 9 percent. There was a question as to whether you believed sales leader growth led volume growth - because if it did volumes will rise over time.

More on that later.

Some of this poor volume results in the first quarter was Venezuela - and for reasons explained in the last post declines in Venezuela are good news not bad news. Net of Venezuela sales growth was probably 7 percent - still a very acceptable rate - albeit a definite slowing.

I stated in the last post that the fair value for Herbalife (assuming an FTC clearance which the shorts think is unlikely) depends critically on the volume numbers.

If volume growth resumes as 8% plus (consistent with the number of active sales leaders) then the stock was worth something around $200.

If the volume growth declined from the growth above then assuming FTC clearance a number around $80 was fair value. [And $80 is about the 12 month high - and predates the FTC inquiry. As someone who still held stock at $80 I would be disappointed.]

Alas for the longs the numbers came in and volume growth declined further.

Here they are:

Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region3Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg3Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg
North America303.0
(4%)
77,2184%
Asia Pacific (ex. China)304.53%76,6495%
EMEA199.015%59,66818%
Mexico218.7(0%)66,9774%
South & Central America204.4(17%)64,2797%
China120.724%19,55023%
Worldwide Total1,350.30%352,2488%

Note volume growth of ZERO.

This was not meant to happen and is a big miss. Net of Venezuela it is not so bad - volume growth of 3%.

The earnings number was awful but that was because of bunch of expected charges. Venezuela has largely gone away (the sales there collapsed and the charge for currency loss has been taken). If the FTC inquiry goes away so do all the remaining charges.

But (assuming FTC clearance) the volume growth is what matters. And that is still clearly slowing.

If that were the end of the story I would be adjusting my target price for the stock below $100.

But I am not - and the reason is explained below. My time-to-target has however unfortunately extended.

Two hypotheses - one bearish, one bullish

The volume point number and the number of sales leaders has diverged sharply. Over time these will converge. That is just the way the world works.

However it is not clear whether the volume points converges on the number of sales leaders (ie volume growth converges to about 8 percent) or whether the number of sales leaders converges on volume growth (something nearer 3 percent and declining).

In other words it is not clear whether volume leads sales leaders or sales leaders lead volume. My instinct is the latter - but it is not obvious.

Lets start with the bearish hypothesis

The bearish hypothesis is simple. The product is increasingly harder to sell. It is saturated. The demand for a "business opportunity" however is substantial (especially when labour markets are not good) and so people are "signing up" to be distributors at the old rate but they are selling less and less.

This obviously is not sustainable - and the sales leaders will sell less and less and will be discouraged from being sales leaders.

Over time sales leader growth (now 8 percent) drops back to volume growth (3 percent and falling).

This is the thesis of several Twitter shorts who talk about saturation all the time.

The bullish hypothesis

The company implemented many changes in business practice in response to Bill Ackman. One of these was a limit on first-time orders (which discourages inventory loading). If the change simply defers purchase then you will find sales leaders continue to grow but for a few quarters sales volume lags badly.

Then you anniversary the business change and the sales volume growth (now 3 percent) converges on the sales leader number growth (now 8 percent).

Now here is the cheeriest thing in the whole Herbalife results.

We can distinguish between these two hypotheses. In the bear case the distributors are getting discouraged (by lack of sales) and hence the sales leader retention rate should be falling.

In the bull hypothesis the sales leaders take longer to qualify but they are selling through at an adequate rate - and hence will stick around.

Here is the point: in every market in the world where Herbalife publishes the sales-leader retention rate retention is rising. Rising retention on rising numbers of sales leaders almost guarantees rising sales in the future.

This is still a growth stock (and deserving of way over $100 per share after FTC clearance) but alas the business practice changes have deferred growth. Its a growth deferred stock.

I am going to make a lot of money. Its just going to be slower. But hey - I will take it.

Oh - and here is the table from the 10-Q of retention:

Number of Sales Leaders   Sales Leaders Retention Rate 
   2014   2013   2014  2013 
North America
   86,129     86,469     55.1  54.7
Mexico
   78,818     78,453     54.2  57.6
South & Central America
   102,152     79,351     54.9  53.6
EMEA
   62,723     57,071     67.7  60.7
Asia Pacific (excluding China)
   126,229     134,714     39.9  40.1
  


   


    
Total Sales Leaders
   456,051     436,058     51.8  51.8
China
   30,037     30,304     
  


   


    
Worldwide Total Sales Leaders
   486,088     466,362    


The good news on the FTC

There was no specific news on the FTC front - but what could be gleaned from the report was fantastic. Yes rip-snorting bullish. Eye-wateringly bullish.

The expenses related to the FTC inquiry were $2.7 million in the second quarter down from $3.0 million the prior quarter.

If legal bills are any guide (and common sense says that they are a guide) then the FTC inquiry is not being very problematic. [The shorts have not noticed this. Generally they are lacking in common sense.]

The bad news

The company had lots of one-off expenses and the cash flow net of these expenses was not wonderful. If (when) the FTC inquiry sorts itself out this will go away - but for the moment it limits financial flexibility.

Nonetheless, the bad cash flow this quarter mattered. The company stopped buying back shares. This quarter it bought back no shares and paid no divided. It distributed nothing to shareholders - and as a shareholder I am not thrilled by that.

But that is more than offset by the good FTC news (as described above) and the increasing number of sales leaders. Growth deferred - but growth nonetheless.

--

Summary: As a bull I am unhappy with the lack of volume growth and the lack of buybacks. This might have curtained the upside of the stock.

But the growth in sales leaders (at higher levels of retention) absolutely puts paid to this. This is a growth stock - just not this year. But we will lap the sales practice changes and this will be an blisteringly good growth stock.

And the evidence in the accounts is that the FTC inquiry is not pressing is overwhelmingly positive.

I was disappointed when I read the results - but hey - I am thrilled now.

Hope they get to buy back some stock in the 40s. That will just be the icing.





John

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Herbalife earnings preview

This is a Herbalife earnings preview. I am an (extreme) bull on this stock - but I will try to state it as neutrally as possible. If the bears wish to comment that is fine.

The FTC inquiry

The thing that matters for Herbalife stock (for both bulls and bears) is not "earnings": it is the state of the Federal Trade Commission inquiry into the company.

There is no assurance that the results of an FTC inquiry will come with earnings however the chance of an FTC result in the medium term is high. [The company has indicated settlement is near and they recently settled a very similar class action case.]

The FTC inquiry has a range of outcomes from ordering the company to close, to a fine plus imposed changes in business practice to doing nothing.

Given market expectations a a fine and compliance changes consistent with the changes that the company has put in place (and agreed to as part of the class action settlement) would be a substantial victory for Herbalife bulls.

Contra: a fine greater than $100 million and highly restrictive business conditions would be a very big loss for the company and shutting down the US operations of the company would be catastrophic.

If the company were to be closed asking about earnings would be silly. "Apart from that Mrs Lincoln how did you enjoy the play?"

Herbalife is an event-driven stock.

The rest of this post is based on the assumption that Herbalife eventually clears the FTC inquiry with minimal damage. It only makes sense to talk about earnings on that basis. The shorts I talk to are convinced the FTC will close Herbalife.

Shorts think there is no point in this post. There ain't no point talking about the company's earnings power when the bullet has already passed through the brain.

Volume growth by region

Herbalife has grown VOLUMES in almost every region in almost every quarter for a very long time. This volume growth slowed in the last quarter. The slowing volume growth was a big disappointment to some longs (including me).

Most longs are far more interested in volume growth than in actual profits. It is the old saw: profit growth is good volume growth is better. If volume is growing the considerable noise in this quarter (Venezuela, legal costs associated with defending the class action, settlement provisions) will go away. And the profit will grow in the future. If volume growth is higher than the discount rate (say higher than 8 percent) it is almost impossible to model what Herbalife is actually worth in a DCF model. With high volume growth you can plausibly make the case that Herbalife is worth a very large price to earnings multiple. You have to value it as a growth stock

By contrast if volume is shrinking then it will deserve a low price-to-earnings multiple regardless of current earnings.

Fortunately for Herbalife volume growth has been good for many years (roughly coinciding with the arrival of Michael Johnson as CEO). The growth was still good last quarter albeit markedly slower and if the slow-down continues it isn't good for longs.

This is easily seen by looking at the data on VOLUME POINTS by quarter. A volume point is a measure of how much Herbalife product is sold. The volume points determine remuneration of the sales force and their definition has not changed. Volume points are thus a very good measure of volume.

Below I am going to cut and paste volume points from the results for the last twelve quarters. This will show the nature of the slowdown in the last quarter.

2011Q3

Here is the table from the report

Third Quarter 2011 Regional Key Metrics 2,3,4
Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg
North America252.912.2%58,89715.3%
Asia Pacific261.236.2%51,64438.5%
EMEA132.415.8%39,22716.7%
Mexico180.623.5%49,77225.9%
South & Central America149.739.5%35,99321.8%
China40.32.3%9,53326.3%
Worldwide Total1017.123.4%236,19123.6%
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg3Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg
Emerging Markets544.526.9%134,46726.4%
Established Markets472.619.5%109,33919.3%
Worldwide Total1017.123.4%236,19123.6%

These rates are absurdly good. Volume growth is high in every region except China (where the base was tiny). The growth rate in mature regions (North America, Mexico) grew at 12.2 and 23.5 percent respectively. Growth was faster in emerging markets.

2011Q4

The company gave year on year and quarter on quarter volume growth statistics in the press release. Here is the quarter on quarter:

Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Yr/Yr %
Region4Q'11Chg4Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg
North America232.116%59,59916%
Asia Pacific257.937%55,12439%
EMEA137.710%41,61817%
Mexico185.420%52,17226%
South & Central America166.035%39,72427%
China43.113%10,07728%
Worldwide Total1,022.223%249,77924%
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Yr/Yr %
4Q'11Chg4Q'11Yr/Yr % Chg
Emerging Markets574.026%143,99729%
Established Markets448.220%112,79220%
Worldwide Total1,022.223%249,77924%
These are still astounding numbers but you will notice that growth in North America accelerated somewhat and growth in Mexico slowed somewhat.

2012Q1

Here are the quarterly numbers from the first quarter of 2012:

Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region1Q'12Yr/Yr % Chg1Q'12Yr/Yr % Chg
North America298.423%62,53219%
Asia Pacific273.838%55,70638%
EMEA145.96%41,33215%
Mexico191.416%52,67424%
South & Central America164.732%40,61431%
China40.925%9,53131%
Worldwide Total1,115.124%252,32123%

The aggregate growth rate has actually risen and now China is meaningful. There was also a massive acceleration in North America growth.

By this stage you should realize that growth rates in individual regions is volatile. Also the growth rate (24 percent) defies conventional discounted cash flow analysis.

2012Q2

Here is 2012Q2 -


Second Quarter Regional Key Metrics1,2
Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region2Q'12Yr/Yr % Chg2Q'12Yr/Yr % Chg
North America305.018%65,82818%
Asia Pacific313.829%61,32935%
EMEA154.513%42,97214%
Mexico203.917%55,96921%
South & Central America167.230%41,96627%
China57.754%11,94943%
Worldwide Total1,202.123%269,97424%

Now China has taken off - growth a torrid 51 percent. But North American growth has shrunk to a mere 18 percent. The aggregate growth rate still sits in the 23-24 percent range.

2012Q3

The third quarter of 2012 has the first meaningful slowdown in growth.

Third Quarter Regional Key Metrics1,2
Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metric
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region3Q'12
Yr/Yr % Chg
3Q'12
Yr/Yr % Chg
North America287.414%67,82615%
Asia Pacific305.617%66,43329%
EMEA145.510%44,86114%
Mexico211.217%60,12321%
South & Central America186.024%46,46629%
China57.142%12,69233%
Worldwide Total1,192.817%288,39722%

Volume growth is only 17 percent. North America is back at 14 percent having been as high as 23 percent.

2012Q4

The Bill Ackman attack on Herbalife was just before Christmas in the dying days of this quarter. If Ackman was going to affect sales it was not likely to be meaningful this quarter.

Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region4Q'12Yr/Yr % Chg4Q'12Yr/Yr % Chg
North America267.015%68,02914%
Asia Pacific304.618%69,55326%
EMEA156.614%47,22614%
Mexico208.913%61,83619%
South & Central America222.534%50,87428%
China50.517%12,56025%
Worldwide Total1,210.118%300,52120%

The growth rate globally pipped up from 17 percent to 18 percent. Growth in China dropped from 42 percent to 17 percent. South and Central America went ballistic growing at 34 percent.

2013Q1

This was the first full quarter after Bill Ackman's attack. If there was going to be a slowdown you would see it here. Moreover you would probably see it in North America because Bill Ackman is far higher profile there than elsewhere. I doubt many Herbalife consumers in Brazil have heard of him.

First Quarter 2013 Key Metrics2,3
Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region1Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg1Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg
North America309.04%68,3529%
Asia Pacific320.017%68,69023%
EMEA161.311%46,09412%
Mexico206.38%60,21614%
South & Central America219.833%52,04928%
China47.616%11,86424%
Worldwide Total1,264.013%296,91618%


And yes - you can see it a little. The North American growth rate had slowed to 3 percent and (at 13 percent) this was actually the slowest growth globally recorded in this sequence.

Mexico - which is the best market of all for Herbalife - has slowed to a mere 8 percent volume growth.

2013Q2

At the end of the first quarter Herbalife implemented several important changes in part in response to Bill Ackman. The most important of these is that they banned lead selling and kicked the lead sellers out of the organization. The Herbalife distributor who was the source of Bill Ackman's nastiest examples (Shawn Dahl) moved to another distributor of diet shakes.

The company suggested that this would have a low single-digit negative effect on sales. Essentially they argued Bill Ackman's examples came from a small minority tagged onto a gigantic and effective selling machine.

Here are the results:


Second Quarter 2013 Key Metrics2,3
Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region2Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg2Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg
North America339.911%72,28210%
Asia Pacific316.91%70,80215%
EMEA179.316%48,00812%
Mexico219.98%62,94013%
South & Central America222.633%54,61430%
China85.949%14,07018%
Worldwide Total1,364.514%311,50315%

If the Ackman attack and the removal of the nasty lead-selling distributors has caused a problem you can't really see it in North American sales (11 percent growth). China had taken off again.

2013Q3

This quarter was interesting - but again the problem was not North America.



Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics

Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region3Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg3Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg
North America314.09%74,0859%
Asia Pacific296.2-3%72,88610%
EMEA173.519%50,72013%
Mexico219.44%64,6338%
South & Central America245.232%60,00729%
China97.471%15,88225%
Worldwide Total1,345.713%326,79713%

An Ackman effect is not obviously present. The US growth rate is a very nice 9 percent - slightly slower than the second quarter.

China took off producing a rip-snorting 71 percent growth.

The Asia Pacific region printed a minus 3 percent number. This is the first negative number reported - and it took me some time to work out what went wrong. The main reason appeared to be the country head in Malaysia leaving for a competitor and stealing the client list as he went out the door.

Still the growth rate for the company was still at 13 percent - a rate most companies would envy - but clearly a slower growth rate than in 2011-12.

2013Q4

The fourth quarter of 2014 was a continuation of the third quarter but on steroids:

Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region4Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg4Q'13Yr/Yr % Chg
North America287.07%73,5118%
Asia Pacific292.4-4%73,7926%
EMEA183.917%53,77614%
Mexico218.75%66,5358%
South & Central America278.625%65,69029%
China102.7103%17,41639%
Worldwide Total1,363.313%339,74413%

Global growth remained at 13 percent - but Asia Pacific was now minus 4 percent, North America slowed a little and China was a rip-snorting 103 percent.

2014Q1

The first quarter of 2014 showed the slowest growth ever - but still within guidance. Here are the numbers:

Regional Volume Point and Average Active Sales Leader Metrics
Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region1Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg1Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg
North America336.59%74,2419%
Asia Pacific302.1(6%)71,6274%
EMEA202.225%54,11317%
Mexico220.27%63,5686%
South & Central America227.74%61,86219%
China91.191%16,64840%
Worldwide Total1,379.89%329,90211%

By now Asia Pacific looks outright bad - minus 6 percent. North America (the place where Ackman will have had most affect) is still fine at 9 percent. China is outrageous - at 91 percent - albeit down from 103 percent in the previous quarter.

But the global growth rate at 9 percent represents a slowing. It didn't thrill the longs.

Herbalife as a growth stock of the highest quality

Growth here is lumpy but almost no companies short of Facebook, Twitter etc grow like this. This is a growth rate associated with the highest value silicon value companies.

The disconnect between longs and shorts in Herbalife was extreme. As a bull I regarded Herbalife as one of the highest quality growth stocks I had ever seen - deserving of a premium multiple.

Shorts see a criminal conspiracy.

For dozens of quarters in a row Herbalife beat its earnings guidance and raised guidance again. They tended to low-ball guidance but with growth like this it was possible to raise guidance sharply almost every quarter.

Stocks with this sort of record trade at 40 plus times earnings not under 10 times earnings. The upside was enormous...

And then came the second quarter. Herbalife beat earnings (no surprise there) BUT THEY DID NOT RAISE EARNINGS GUIDANCE.

As a long I was disappointed.

Here are the volume point numbers for the second quarter of 2014.

Volume Points (Mil)Average Active Sales Leaders
Region2Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg2Q'14Yr/Yr % Chg
North America335.8(1%)75,7725%
Asia Pacific320.21%74,9166%
EMEA218.822%56,69218%
Mexico231.35%64,6563%
South & Central America206.3(7%)62,17214%
China118.538%18,70333%
Worldwide Total1,430.95%340,6449%


5 percent volume growth is something that most companies would kill for - but for Herbalife - which has been a growth stock of the highest quality - it was disappointing.

Worse - really good markets like South America had seemingly fallen off a cliff. The minus 7 percent in South America was ugly - by far the worst looking result recorded since the (seeming) miracle worker Michael Johnson became CEO.

North America also shrunk suggesting that the Ackman attack was biting. And growth in China was merely rapid rather than blisteringly fast.

The stock has been weak ever since.

It is this slowdown (or a possible reversal of it) which - outside a result from the FTC - is what longs will most be looking for.

And bluntly - if the growth rate were to accelerate again (say to 8-9 percent) and the FTC were to clear the company - the company should be valued as a super-premium growth stock. [$6.70 earnings per share times 30 = $200 per share does not seem unreasonable.]

However if the growth rate continues to decelerate (say to 3 percent per share) then a 14 times earnings - say $6.30 times 14 = $88.20 - seems reasonable.

The range of "fair values"

The range of "fair values" for this stock is enormous.

If the FTC closes them the fair value is something close to zero.

If the FTC clears them and the growth rate decelerates then the fair value is say $80 per share. This would be a nice upswing on the stock - but it would only take us back to the 52 week high - and that was after Ackman was shown to be wrong.

If the FTC clears them and the growth accelerates then fair value is plausibly somewhere about $200 per share. Longs like me would be cheering. Shorts would be brutalized. Pershing Square would survive - but Bill Ackman would not look great.

To say this is an interesting earnings announcement is understating it.

---

Good growth and bad growth - Venezuela 

Amid all this growth the short-sellers have made a huge deal about the sales in a single country: Venezuela.

The problem is simple. If you send product to Venezuela you can't get paid. Its worse than that even - if you send product to Venezuela you may have to pay a non-Venezuelan upline US dollars against Bolivar that you can't convert to US dollars and can't repatriate.

Sending product to Venezuela is bad news.

Now it is bad news that is grotesquely overstated. Herbalife has been growing like a weed in many countries where it can repatriate money. However it is bad news nonetheless.

There are a few underlying issues:

(a). Venezuela - absent currency controls - would be an absolutely natural market company for a company selling weight loss solutions. Venezuelans are beauty obsessed. It is a darn pity for the company that one of their best markets has imploded through no fault of their own. Because Herbalife is naturally strong in Venezuela many of the top-level distributors throughout South America are of Venezuelan origin. I have met a few.

(b). It is very hard for a multi-level-marketing company to stop supplying people. There are tens of thousand of people who have built businesses around Herbalife in Venezuela. If Herbalife were to stop supplying them their businesses would collapse. Herbalife has long viewed maintaining a good relationship with their suppliers as an ethical priority. This is a partnership. They believe that it is deeply unethical to destroy people's business and close off supply if something like currency control is temporary. [Incidentally I agree with the company here. Time and again I have found this company to be highly ethical in direct contradiction to the short thesis and in contradiction to my original belief.]

(c). Against this as Venezuela's currency controls made it profitable to buy Herbalife in Bolivar, collect the upline payments in US dollars and truck the product to another South American country to sell.

Until very recently Herbalife shipped a lot of product to Venezuela and bore the losses. Herbalife sales - according to the conference call - fell 40 percent in Venezuela last quarter. This was the bulk of but not the entire reason for the 7 percent negative print in Central and South American volumes last quarter.

I hope that Herbalife publishes Central and South America including and not including Venezuela so we can see the real quality sales growth separated from the Venezuelan disaster.

The other issue in South America is that Brazil is (I think) the biggest South American market. Trying to sell diet products during the World Cup looks rather tricky. That effect should reverse this quarter. Net of Venezuela I expect good South American growth this quarter.

Venezuela will also cause considerable noise in the earnings because Herbalife has considerable currency stuck there - unable to be repatriated - and the Bolivar is collapsing. They will probably have to take a charge.

If Venezuelan sales continue to fall as per above this is not a major recurring issue.

--

Revenue

Volume growth is the really important issue. Volume growth will translate to revenue over time - however this quarter it will not be as good as usual. The US dollar has been strong - and prices adjust with a trail.

As a result I think that revenue growth will be slightly weaker than volume growth. Dispassionately I think you should look through this. Volume (and the FTC) is what will determine value in the end.

Still over the years the volume growth has resulted in massive revenue growth. Here - so you can appreciate it in its glorious detail - is the quarterly revenue growth since 2003. There are VERY few companies this good.


March 2003
280
June 2003
288.9
September 2003
290.4
December 2003
300.1
March 2004
324.1
June 2004
324.2
September 2004
319.8
December 2004
341.6
March 2005
372.1
June 2005
384.7
September 2005
401
December 2005
409
March 2006
455.8
June 2006
466
September 2006
476.4
December 2006
487.4
March 2007
508.1
June 2007
530.1
September 2007
529.5
December 2007
578.1
March 2008
604.4
June 2008
639.7
September 2008
602.2
December 2008
512.9
March 2009
521.7
June 2009
571.8
September 2009
600.2
December 2009
630.9
March 2010
618.6
June 2010
688.8
September 2010
688.4
December 2010
738.4
March 2011
795.1
June 2011
879.7
September 2011
895.2
December 2011
884.6
March 2012
964.2
June 2012
1,031.90
September 2012
1,016.90
December 2012
1,059.30
March 2013
1,123.60
June 2013
1,219.20
September 2013
1,213.50
December 2013
1,268.90
March 2014
1,262.60
June 2014
1,306.20


I expect yet another record quarter. Herbalife is a growth stock of the highest quality and after the FTC matters settle should be repriced as such.

----

Other one-off charges

Herbalife's results are going to be full of one-off charges. The lawyer bills for (and maybe the settlement of) the class action will be expensed in this quarter.

Considerable legal bills associated with the FTC inquiry will also be there - and those will also go away.

Venezuela might be a moderately big number - but as long as sales there are sharply declining I suspect you should ignore that too.

Herbalife will post "adjusted" earnings adding back these charges. As these issues are temporary this is one company where I think the non-GAAP number is the one you should keep your eye on. [You can choose how to caveat the Venezuela numbers...]

Share count

Herbalife is - on the accounts - a fantastic company - it has a WAY higher than market growth rate, and buys back stock extremely aggressively. It has done so before Bill Ackman came along and it accelerated the buy back after Bill Ackman.

Given the huge growth rate and how cheap the stock is if (when) the FTC issue goes away every onf these buy-backs is massively value-adding. The share count has since Mr Ackman turned up dropped from about 106 million to the mid 80s. The share count is something bulls will be watching sharply.

Summary

The range of outcomes are as large for this company as any I have ever seen. A bad outcome at the FTC would render the stock near worthless.

A re-acceleration of growth and FTC clearance would render fair value greater than $200.

I have spent a lot of time looking in detail at this company and contrary to my prior expectations I have found the company to be consistently ethical - even to the detriment of short-term profits. I hope after examining the evidence that the FTC comes to the same conclusion and fines for (real) past indiscretions are minor. Venezuela - which shorts have turned into some monstrosity central to their thesis - is a good example. It is (a) minor and (b) a place where the company has been losing money by behaving ethically.

The $200 a share fair value after a good FTC outcome and re-acceleration of growth is before any short-squeeze. Short squeezes usually take stocks to values way higher than intrinsic value. I have placed my bets - many have placed their bets the opposite way.

It will be fun to watch.





John

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