by Jenise » Tue Aug 11, 2020 11:39 am
The following isn't much of a surprise; it just puts numbers on the situation. What surprised me most is to find out that while Hello Fresh sales are surging, and other brands like Amazon and Ocado are similarly pacing up (there was a graph in the article that can't transfer over), domestic competitor Blue Apron's running flat. I wonder why.
By Carol Ryan
Aug. 11, 2020 8:05 am ET
Perfect conditions for meal-kit companies won’t last forever. But with Covid-19 infections spiking again in key markets and fewer people going on summer vacation, HelloFresh’s HFG -0.91% winning streak can continue for a while longer.
The German company said Tuesday that sales at constant exchange rates rose by 122% in the second quarter compared with the same three months of 2019. An operating margin of 13.8% was up from just 0.3% in the year-ago period. Management also increased its 2020 sales and profit expectations for the third time since January.
HelloFresh is now a rare European tech name that is beating a U.S. rival hands down. Troubled New York-listed competitor Blue Apron reported quarterly growth of just 10% and hasn’t been able to capitalize on the demand spike in the same way.
The pandemic has led to a boom in sales for most companies that deliver food to customers’ doors. Before Covid-19, a typical U.S. family cooked at home four times a week, according to numbers cited by HelloFresh. Today, when working remotely, they take seven evening meals at home and often lunch as well.
The trend is driving higher average order values at HelloFresh as well as a surge in user numbers. An increase in infection rates suggests demand will remain strong in the U.S. in particular, where the business makes over half its sales. And with fewer consumers vacationing this year, the company isn’t experiencing the drop-off in orders it usually registers in summertime.
These ideal growth ingredients won’t be around indefinitely. When consumers become comfortable dining out again and supermarkets can fulfill more e-commerce orders, HelloFresh’s growth will ebb. Marketing costs—typically a big cash burner for meal-kit companies—also look artificially low. As customers sought out the service of their own accord, HelloFresh’s promotion spending dropped to 8.5% of sales from 21% in the comparable period last year.
The stock may still have another serving for investors, who have already enjoyed a 152% gain this year. At 2.3 times projected sales, HelloFresh’s valuation is still relatively cheap compared with other tech names that also are benefiting from the pandemic. Shares of Ocado, another rapidly expanding European food-tech company, trade for 7.1 times. Amazon. com, which isn’t growing as rapidly, is at a multiple of 3.9 times.
Appetites for HelloFresh—from customers and shareholders alike—should be healthy for the rest of the year.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov