Saturday, February 28, 2015
An interpretation of the Herbalife result
The bad elements are
(a). That volume fell - and quite sharply - minus 6 percent, and
(b). There was an inventory build in the face of the volume fall.
The shorts have played these elements up - and combined they meant that the cash flow was sequentially far less good.
The good element (which the company played up) was
(c). distributor numbers and retention went up sharply.
In the past distributor numbers and volume have been very tightly correlated.
They are no longer tightly correlated.
Inevitably they will become correlated again - but the question is which direction. Will volume growth rise to match distributor growth or will distributors leave disillusioned?
On this the Herbalife debate will hinge. [The bears will argue the FTC will also be an issue - but I doubt that strongly.]
An interpretation of the results in the light of Herbalife corporate rule changes
The company implemented three core rule changes which were trialled first in Eastern Europe and which I have cross checked with some Eastern European distributors.
These are
i). Requiring that you qualify as a distributor slowly - ie there are no 4000 point success builder orders any more. Note that this rule change slows orders down.
ii). Requiring that the first qualification not be by "field sales" - you must buy from the company (note this slows orders down in Mexico and other countries for reasons that will be seen below).
iii). Requiring that if you sell via a website you do it under your distributor label (you get paid) on the GoHerbalife.com site. A delivery is then made direct to the customer obviating the need for the distributor to hold any inventory - and hence allowing de-stocking of distributor inventory and thus slowing current sales.
Why these rule changes
There are several reasons they implemented these rules.
One reason is that if a distributor qualifies as say 4*$1000 orders she is more likely to stay around than a distributor qualifying by a single $4000 order. The upline can then focus training on distributors who are more likely to stick around. This means new distributors become more effective.
A second (and possibly more important reason) is that they are very good at fending off Ackman's complaints. Slowing initial orders is antithetical to inventory loading (and inventory loading a required component of declaring Herbalife a pyramid). More importantly the third rule change obviates the need for any distributor inventory - and is a complete protection against a claim that Herbalife is a pyramid.
A third reason is about control of the business - particularly in developing markets. For example, in Mexico the up-line distributors have built warehouses all over the country - there are three Chairmans Club members who own the warehouses. The Chairmans club members can distribute Herbalife to you same day anywhere in the country almost everywhere - even with crappy Mexican logistics.
This is good for Herbalife (as they get lots of sales) but they are a risk for Herbalife - in that the Chairman club members might defect to a competitor taking their warehouses, customers and downline with them.
To "own" the customers Herbalife wants distributors to qualify with sales direct from the company. They are banning "field sales" for qualification.
Moreover Herbalife is building its own warehouses over the country. As it does this its distributor warehouses are being (to a small extent) de-stocked and its own warehouses are being stocked. The de-stocking of distributor warehouse is a drain on current sales and the stocking of its own is a costly inventory build.
All of these things should (i) make Herbalife stronger and (ii) explain the falling sales, increasing inventory and simultaneously increasing distributor numbers.
And if this interpretation is correct Herbalife should come back growing volume with a vengeance.
This is a deferred growth story.
John
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Maximus and outsourced unemployment services in Australia
We operate primarily in the United States, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia.
Year ended September 30, | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||
United States
| $ | 1,306,026 | $ | 999,419 | $ | 775,871 | ||||
Australia
| 170,727 | 157,383 | 163,482 | |||||||
Rest of World
| 224,159 | 174,477 | 110,792 | |||||||
| | | | | | | | | | |
Total
| $ | 1,700,912 | $ | 1,331,279 | $ | 1,050,145 | ||||
| | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | |
"There are credible claims of widespread rorting by some agencies.... we have now completed an investigation which suggest that significant fraud, criminality is going on."
We are currently in the process of rebidding on much of our work in Australia. We anticipate that a new contract will commence during the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2015. These contracts are likely to have more contingent revenue streams, less up-front fees and will likely incur losses in early quarters. However, we anticipate that the contracts will be profitable.
Saturday, February 21, 2015
The epic Retrophin 8-K filing
They have their eye out for the inflated claim re the efficacy of a drug and the wheeling and dealing in stock.
Unusually Martin became CEO of a biotech (Retrophin) and became a wheeler-and-dealer himself. Martin also kept a twitter account where he recommended Retrophin stock and suggested (often correctly) that other biotechs were worth shorting.
He is a 31 year old - but all the photos make him look 17. The joke about his hyperactive twitter account was that he would tweet if he had a date.
Anyway eventually - and after a saga you can look up if you want - he was ousted as CEO of his own company.
Today the company released an 8-K explaining what the board found after his ouster - and it is already being described as an epic. Here goes for some of it.
Consulting Agreements. Between September 2013 and March 2014, the Company entered into several consulting agreements and releases with individuals or entities that had been investors in investment funds previously managed by Mr. Shkreli (the “MSMB Entities”), or that otherwise had financial dealings with Mr. Shkreli. The agreements provided for the issuance of a total of 612,500 shares of common stock of the Company, and a total of $400,000 in cash payments by the Company. The Oversight Committee concluded that the Company should not continue to treat these agreements as consulting agreements because their predominant purpose appears to have been to settle and release claims against the MSMB Entities or Mr. Shkreli personally, and not to provide meaningful and sustained consulting services to the Company.And
Litigation Settlements. In the second quarter of 2014, the Company settled two lawsuits involving individuals who had formerly performed services for both the Company and the MSMB Entities. The Oversight Committee concluded that approximately $200,000 in cash payments made by the Company as part of these settlements appear to have been made to cause these individuals to transfer 176,388 shares of the Company’s common stock directly to Mr. Shkreli.
But the really dumb luck. I got sick, missed the rise when he left, and only read he resigned today - so so only shorted today. I would rather be lucky than good.
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Stock research on Spark Networks (jdate.com)
My personality is best described as high maintenance.
Whatever: anyone want a high maintenance wife?
John
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Mr Andy Z. Fan is better than you
Monday, February 2, 2015
Dear Eurozone officials, Mr Putin is waiting
" the fears of eurozone officials that the Greek government was unaware of the precariousness of its financial situation"
This is kind of amazing. There is an old adage - which is that if you owe someone $100 you have a problem. If you owe someone a $100,000,000,000 they have a problem.
Greece's debt (and hence the German/Eurozone problem) is somewhat larger than that.
Moreover Greece runs a primary budget surplus. The only reason the Greek government needs money (ever) is to roll existing debt.
If they default on existing debt that problem goes away.
Paul Krugman summarised the problem with devastating clarity.
Bluntly he points out the Troika (and the above worried Eurozone officials) can't hurt the Greek Government by denying incremental finance because the Greek Government does not need incremental finance.
--
Krugman does however point out that the Greek banks require finance. As Krugman puts it:
"the power of the creditors over Greece comes via the ability to crash the Greek banking system, which is heavily dependent on the ability to borrow at need from the ECB. Cut off that support, and Greece suffers banking collapse. So yes, the creditors have a large club they can use on a recalcitrant Greece."But Krugman overstates that club. It is entirely within Alexis Tsipras's power to default to the ECB too. Indeed the pattern for government defaults is to simultaneously force a private sector default.
How about this for a negotiating position... we will pass a law to make it illegal for any Greek bank to repay the ECB. Period.
Then have a one week banking holiday, re-denominate all remaining Greek bank assets and liabilities in Drachma, and if a default event passes any court we will nationalise the Greek banks as-per-Washington Mutual - leaving the obligations in some stripped-down shell from which there is nothing to collect.
Finally, in this environment, depositors will receive shares in the new Greek banks in proportion to their deposits. Those shares will be worth a lot because an obscene amount of bank liabilities will be wiped out.
--
This will crash the Greek economy? You make me laugh. We are already at Great Depression levels and removing the burden of your silly debt schedules will be incredibly stimulative.
Sure we will lose access to clearing but Vladimir Putin is lending us a few billion dollars and we have a clearing arrangement in Singapore. [They will do this for anyone from Libyan dictators down...]
Moreover I was once told by Capital One - a respected US credit card company - that recently bankrupted people make the best credits.* After all their past debts have been cancelled and they are by definition solvent. It won't take two years and the financial markets will be happy to lend to us again.
--
Finally we are not a wildly interconnected economy. Its not like Finmeccanica - the Italian company which makes components for Boeing Dreamliners and thus needs the global financial and payments system to function. We do simple stuff, sell olive oil and feta cheese and lots of tourism services.
It won't take long but we expect our beaches to be overrun with fat often drunk German tourists. And we kind of like it that way. The fatter the better. At we will sell them Retsina. It will be cheap and they might learn to like it. You Germans like to drink, don't you.
--
So what do I want?
Enough money that I am allowed to run primary deficits. Fairly large ones. 1.5 percent of GDP would be nice but I will settle for 1 percent. And of course you know we are never going to repay it.
I don't care how you do this. You can do it as a direct subsidy, you can do it any way you like. But as we are not going to repay it so at some stage you are going to suck it up. For political purposes you probably want to dress it in some "equalisation scheme" so it is less obvious what you are doing. But that is your problem. You know what I want.
I am off to the hotel to read a little. Just kick back. Sunday night I have a flight booked to Moscow but I might go early. I hear the girls are hot there.
And besides Mr Putin is waiting.
Alexis...
*On a personal level I was truly told that by a Capital One senior staffer.
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