A BUBBLE IN COFFEE STOCKS?

07/26/11 03:50AM EDT

Below is an excerpt from the Dunkin' Donuts Black Book that we published today.

With valuations for the DNKN peer group having increased 56% over the past 12-months, the aggregated market caps of the few largest publicly traded coffee-centric companies almost equals the entire US coffee market’s annual revenues.

According to the National Coffee Association, the US coffee market represented $34 billion in 2009; the specialty coffee category generated $15-17 billion in annual revenues and the traditional category brought in $17-19 billion.  It would be a conservative measure to assume the high end of these ranges to estimate the present size of the market, bringing the current size of the market to $36 billion.  The coffee space is partly comprised of some very sizable companies with significant capital reserves that compete fiercely with one another for market share.  A front-runner in the corporate coffee war thus far is Green Mountain.  The company’s domination of the “at-home” coffee industry through Keurig machines and K-Cups has generated handsome returns.   The growth prospects for GMCR remain vast, at least if you share the view of investors; the stock currently trades at 29x EV/EBITDA and has a market capitalization of approximately $14 billion.  Green Mountain’s market cap equals roughly 40% of the estimated $36 billion US coffee market’s revenues or 117% of the “at-home” US coffee market’s $12 billion in annual sales.  While GMCR has recently expanded into Canada, the company is close to a pure play on the US market.

Turning to Starbucks, if we apply a 7x multiple to the company’s US EBITDA, the business would be valued between $10-11 Billion.  This hypothetical value, added to the Green Mountain market cap, implies that the cumulative market caps of the two companies equals roughly 70% of the entire US coffee markets annual revenues.  Lastly, MCD on Friday became the first restaurant company to grow its market cap north of $100 billion largely due to strong 2Q earnings results that were driven by success in selling coffee and other beverages.  Could coffee stocks be in a bubble at the moment?  We certainly think so.

 

A BUBBLE IN COFFEE STOCKS? - COFFEE MARKET

 

A BUBBLE IN COFFEE STOCKS? - 1 yr QSR valuation

Howard Penney

Managing Director

Rory Green

Analyst

© 2024 Hedgeye Risk Management, LLC. The information contained herein is the property of Hedgeye, which reserves all rights thereto. Redistribution of any part of this information is prohibited without the express written consent of Hedgeye. Hedgeye is not responsible for any errors in or omissions to this information, or for any consequences that may result from the use of this information.