Stock of the Day

May 13, 2024

Shopify (SHOP)

$115.40
-$8.08 (-6.5%)
Market Cap: $159.87B

About Shopify

Shopify Inc., a commerce company, provides a commerce platform and services in Canada, the United States, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Asia Pacific, Australia, China, and Latin America. The company's platform enables merchants to displays, manages, markets, and sells its products through various sales channels, including web and mobile storefronts, physical retail locations, pop-up shops, social media storefronts, native mobile apps, buy buttons, and marketplaces; and enables to manage products and inventory, process orders and payments, fulfill and ship orders, new buyers and build customer relationships, source products, leverage analytics and reporting, manage cash, payments and transactions, and access financing. It also sells custom themes and apps, and registration of domain names; and merchant solutions, which include accepting payments, shipping, and securing working capital. The company was formerly known as Jaded Pixel Technologies Inc. and changed its name to Shopify Inc. in November 2011. Shopify Inc. was incorporated in 2004 and is headquartered in Ottawa, Canada.

Shopify Bull Case

Here are some ways that investors could benefit from investing in Shopify Inc.:

  • Shopify Inc. has a strong market capitalization of $165.85 billion, indicating a robust position in the market and potential for growth.
  • The stock is currently trading at $128.36, which is close to its 12-month high of $128.57, suggesting strong investor confidence and momentum.
  • With a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 119.96, while high, it reflects the market's expectations for future growth, which could lead to significant returns if the company meets or exceeds these expectations.
  • The company has a very low debt-to-equity ratio of 0.09, indicating that it is not heavily reliant on debt for financing, which can be a sign of financial stability.
  • Shopify Inc. has a quick ratio and current ratio of 7.10, demonstrating strong liquidity and the ability to cover short-term obligations, which is attractive to investors looking for financial health.

Shopify Bear Case

Investors should be bearish about investing in Shopify Inc. for these reasons:

  • The stock has a high beta of 2.47, indicating that it is more volatile than the market, which could lead to larger price swings and increased risk for investors.
  • Shopify Inc. reported earnings per share of $0.34, missing the consensus estimate of $0.44, which may raise concerns about its profitability and ability to meet market expectations.
  • The PEG ratio of 2.49 suggests that the stock may be overvalued relative to its growth rate, which could deter value-focused investors.
  • Recent trading volume of 8,508,068 shares exceeded the average volume of 6,434,349, which could indicate speculative trading rather than solid investment interest.
  • With 69.27% of the stock owned by institutional investors, there may be less room for retail investors to influence the stock price, potentially leading to less favorable conditions for individual investors.

Shopify Stock Took a Breather, Markets Stay Bullish On its Future

Written By Gabriel Osorio-Mazilli on 5/9/2024

Shopify Stock forecast

After reporting its first quarter 2024 earnings results, arguably the most important set of results as they set the tone for the rest of the year in any stock, shares of Shopify Inc. (NYSE: SHOP) are plummeting by as much as 20% during the trading session. However, investors could see that this is a mere breather before the stock makes a potential recovery. 

Sticking to the business fundamentals and further economic trends happening today in the U.S. economy, those who still have faith in Shopify’s value proposition could see more evidence backing a potential bull case. More than that, investors can gauge the stock’s future through a Wall Street analyst lens and how markets remain bullish on the name. 

Comparing Shopify stock to peers like Salesforce Inc. (NYSE: CRM) and even Etsy Inc. (NASDAQ: ETSY) would show that, even after a steep decline in what turned out to be better than expected earnings, markets are still willing to pay a premium to be exposed to Shopify’s future earnings. 

It’s All a Business Cycle Scare

For the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic, the two most important economic sectors – responsible for GDP growth – contracted simultaneously: Manufacturing and services. 

Investors can follow these sectors’ activity through the ISM manufacturing PMI and the services PMI indexes. After contracting for more than 15 months, manufacturing looks to be returning, as it reported its first expansion reading for March 2024. 

On the other hand, services are slowing down to have their first contraction reading since 2020, but that’s not necessarily bad news. Of course, seeing a slowdown all across services, Shopify investors may have chosen to take profits off the table. 

However, a comeback in manufacturing can also signal a reset for services, as the two typically go hand in hand. And this time, the Federal Reserve (the Fed) comes to push both these sectors higher through proposed interest rate cuts this year. 

Initially expected to come in March 2024, the CME’s FedWatch tool shows a 48.5% probability of a 25 basis point rate cut by September instead. Indeed, postponing these cuts may have thrown off a few investors who chose to avoid what could be a highly cyclical stock in Shopify. 

Fundamentals Confirm, Just a Hiccup

Investors can check out Shopify’s press release for the quarter’s results and see headlines leading with a 29% revenue growth over the year. Double-digit revenue growth is far from a characteristic a contracting business carries, so investors can ease their grip so far. 

If anything, businesses seeing their margins squeezed by stubbornly high inflation in the U.S. economy could call on Shopify’s solutions to help. Offering cheap and easy scalability to its customers, Shopify’s gross merchandise volume rose by 23% over the year to reach $60.9 billion. 

At the same time, the company’s subscription solutions revenue jumped by 34% in the past 12 months, showing the resiliency of the business model in a contracting economy. But here’s where investors can really begin to relax. 

Shopify’s free cash flow (operating cash flow minus capital expenditures) was reported at $232 million, up from $86 million a year prior (that’s a doubling!).

However, all of this is in the rearview mirror. Hence, management’s guidance becomes just as important for investors trying to figure out where Shopify may be headed. 

A Bright Future Remains

Management points to double-digit revenue growth in the coming quarter. Free cash flow will remain at a similar margin to the first quarter, helping investors reach wealth compounding by keeping this stock as a potential selection. 

Following this momentum, Wall Street analysts placed a 50.9% earnings per share (EPS) growth projection for this year in Shopify. The stock remains above Etsy’s 17.5% projections and 15% for Salesforce, and markets aren’t shy about making their preference for Shopify clear. 

Shopify stock trades at a forward P/E ratio of 49. x, commanding a premium of 93% over Salesforce’s 25.6x valuation. Today’s valuation also calls for a 139% premium over Etsy’s 20.7x. Stocks typically trade at premium valuations for a good reason. Wall Street analysts see more than double-digit EPS growth ahead. 

Analysts at Citigroup saw it fit to boost Shopify’s price targets up to $105. To prove these analysts right, the stock would need to rally by 67.2%, where investors have undeniable evidence to consider a second look into this recent dip. 

Bears don’t feel comfortable running into short Shopify stock, as short interest declined by 3.8% over the past month.  

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