12/7/15
The big news in the financial world today was the $92.00
cash offer for Keurig Green Mountain
(GMCR) by Germany’s JAB Holdings. That $92 was a (Get this!) 78% premium to
GMCR’s close on Friday. GMCR traded up
$37.19, or 72%, to $88.89 today. All in
all, a great day for people long GMCR, a group that did not include your truly.
I have only a few, and probably not all that
consequential, thoughts on the deal, but more salient thoughts on GMCR and its
signature product, the Keurig single cup coffee maker.
On the deal…
·
Until today, the shorts were having a field day
with GMCR; at Friday’s close of $51.70, GMCR was down 63% from its 52 week
closing high of $139.69, reached just about a year ago. Maybe the Reimann family, which essentially
is JAB Holdings, knows something the existing shorts don’t. Or maybe the Reimanns just think the stock
had fallen too far, partially courtesy of the shorts. We don’t know what their thought process
was.
·
That $92 per share price for GMCR is, according to reports, 15 times
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, or EBITDA. Fifteen times. Wow.
Back in the ‘80s when I was a kid working on the buy side of junk bond
market and knew everything, we would look at deals with big multiples of
EBITDA, but even in those gun slinging days, a 15 EBITDA multiple was
considered, er, risky. And I remember fondly
the familiar response of my boss, or, more properly, my boss’s boss, a great
man named Bill Buecking, when yours
truly would present such deals. He
would read the material, listen to my presentation, lean back, shake his head,
and say “We’ve come a long way with these deals…a LONG way.” Fortunately, Bill’s wisdom often overrode my
rookie omniscience and saved us from a lot of bowser deals.
So, no, I don’t know a lot about the specifics of the
GMCR deal. But my experience with such
deals, my respect for some of the people who remained short GMCR, and the years
that have passed since I was a 20 something at Kemper who knew everything, give
me pause. But I’d sure like to have
been long GMCR before the open this morning.
More salient is the suspicions I have had about these
single serving coffee makers since their inception. After doing some quick calculations and
discovering that making a single serve Keurig cost about as much per cup as
making seven cups of coffee in a Mister
Coffee, I wondered who in the world buys these things.
Keurig marketed this latest bow to the “Gotta have it
because my neighbors have it” approach to spending that permeates our society
by saying that a Keurig cup is a downright bargain compared to a cup of coffee
at Starbuck’s (Note to Keurig: so is just about any other consumable in the
world on a per ounce basis.) or even at Dunkin’
Donuts. Well, yeah, but you
actually have to brew your own coffee with a Keurig. The far more apt comparison is to a brew
your own cup out of a Mister Coffee or even a Melitta coffee maker, if you
must. In that comparison, the Keurig cup
gets beat more mercilessly than a hapless opponent of the late Dick the Bruiser. But don’t tell that to a yuppie in a hurry to
spend money he doesn’t have to buy something he doesn’t need in order to
impress people he doesn’t like. But I
digress.
So I was heartened this morning as I was listening to Bloomberg Radio on the way to Mass and
heard an analyst (Sorry; I didn’t catch his name or employer.) say the
following about buyers of Keurigs:
“These are people
who turn a four cent cup into a 30 cent cup and pay $100 for the
privilege. So I don’t think price
sensitivity is an issue here.”
This insightful young (I presume; I am rapidly
approaching, if I haven’t passed, the age at which everyone is young.) man,
obviously, was responding to a question regarding price sensitivity and Keurig
products and was therefore commenting only on those aspects of the Keurig
customer. Yours truly, however, would
apply the same logic, as I have in the past, to other characteristics of the typical
Keurig customer. I was immediately
reminded of the insight of P.T. Barnum,
who reminded us that there is a sucker born every minute. But the reiteration this morning by the
aforementioned highly compensated analyst of my years ago thoughts on the price
“logic” behind a Keurig purchase brought to mind one of the most famous, but
most misquoted, musings of one of my heroes, H.L. Mencken, to wit:
“No one in this world,
so far as I know—and I have researched the records for years, and employed
agents to help me—has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of
the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office
thereby.”
I would perhaps limit this observation to the apparent
upper strata of society rather than to “the great masses of the plain people,”
but the underlying idea is self-evident.
Those who do throw their coffee money away so frivolously
will doubtless retort
“Oh, but I like coffee from my Keurig and, after all, I
can afford it. ”
…as if that answer should somehow give us comfort about the
future of both our republic and our economy given that both are in the hands of
many of those who employ such “logic.”
I, and I am sure you, know people who can afford to throw $20 bills off the
top of the John Hancock Building and
would doubtless have a few laughs doing so.
That makes it a good idea?
So I don’t know if JAB’s purchase of GMCR will work out
for JAB. But for it to work, the
American people will have to continue to spend money on highly cost ineffective
geegaws, which is a great bet. Further, however,
the growing competition for CMGR’s not all that unique line of products will
have to somehow stumble and fail to catch the limited attention span of the
type of people who pay seven or eight times a product’s value in order to be
trendy and “with it,” a more questionable bet.
Finally, JAB will have to find financing for a 15 times EBITDA deal in
an environment featuring rising short term interest rates and a weakening junk
bond market. I suspect I know what Bill
Buecking would have said 30 years ago and what yours truly, after having
acquired a small measure of Mr. Buecking’s wisdom, would say today. But since I don’t ply the junk waters any
more, I’ll just make myself a 4 cent cup of coffee and leave this deal for the
smart kids to ponder.
Keurig as a whole is dead, there patents are over for the k-cup, and the fast coffee brewer. Go to any grocery store and you will see tons of store brand kcups. To compete, they came out with Keurig 2.0 that has a computer chip on the k-cup so you only use there brand cups and consumers hate it. I have their original, and love it. It's hot fresh coffee in seconds. if you use a reusable filter, it's the same cost as a Mr coffee at one cup at a time. For any one to pay 15 times earnings, their nuts to buy a slowly disappearing company.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading and commmenting, Jeremy; good insight into another problem at GMCR. I don't know how you get the price of a K-cup down anywhere near the price of a Mister Coffee brewed cup of joe. But I'm glad you enjoy it.
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