Monday, July 23, 2012

1 Simple Belief That Resulted in a 4-Bagger - DailyFinance

Toward the end of 2007, Apple (NAS: AAPL) had been on one of the most remarkable runs in American business history. Just five years earlier in 2002, the company had a market cap of around $7 billion or so. By 2007, it was well over $100 billion. And revenue in 2007 -- the year that Apple introduced the iPhone -- increased 24%.

This amazing performance led many investors to believe that they had missed the bus when it came to buying shares in the company. With Apple's P/E ratio well over 40 in December 2007, the stock just seemed too expensive.

In retrospect, we now know that Apple was just getting started. Fool co-founder David Gardner recommended the stock for the first time in his Stock Advisor service back in January 2008. And that pick resulted in a 280% gain. In David's recommendation, which is included in its entirety below, he concluded by saying, "It's never too late to own a great company." That's a very simple belief that resulted in huge gains for investors with the fortitude to invest in a seemingly overvalued stock. And it's definitely an outlook that can be applied to a handful of outstanding companies today.

Given the extraordinary performance of Apple over the past four and a half years, we thought it might be helpful to publish David's original recommendation on Fool.com. Below you'll find it exactly as it appeared in the January 2008 issue of Stock Advisor.

David Gardner's Top Pick for January 2008:

It's lovely, it's juicy, it's even (at times) a low-hanging fruit. Yet Apple has never found itself on the plate of any Motley Fool service. Until today.

With its iPod, iPhone, and increasingly popular Mac desktops and laptops, Apple needs little introduction. Heck, it's already one of the most discussed stocks in Fooldom. It has nearly 12,000 active recommendations in CAPS (with more than 95% of All Stars calling for it to outperform) -- and I've caught more than a little flak from readers who've wondered why I've overlooked it for so long.

Late to the Party
I'll admit, I'm not a user of Apple's products (though my kids all have iPods), which partly explains why I "missed the boat." While I don't expect this stock to quintuple over the next five years, I want to make the case to you that even using some fairly conservative assumptions, this stock -- which is often derided in the press as overvalued because of its lofty price-to-earnings ratio -- is still cheap ... and it has some great gains ahead of it.

Apple makes most of its revenue (78% in fiscal 2007) from two product categories: iPods and Mac computers. We can now add the iPhone as the company's third major line. Software, services, the iTunes music store, and various peripherals added "only" about $5.3 billion to revenue that totaled $24 billion in fiscal 2007.

I expect Apple's revenue to about triple in the next five years. And to get there, I don't need to make wildly optimistic assumptions. Even if iPod sales go essentially stagnant from here, even if the incredible growth in Mac sales gradually tapers off to about 15% (from the 40% it enjoyed in 2007), the iPhone should get Apple to about $72 billion in revenue by 2012.

This amounts to a projection of 24.5% annual growth, which isn't greatly out of line with analysts' estimates, but it warrants some explanation.

Hidden Revenue
The iPhone -- a popular $399 gadget that Apple expects to sell at least 10 million of in 2008 -- requires a two-year contract with AT&T (NYS: T) , which shares the revenue with Apple. The terms aren't disclosed, but estimates run from about $11 to $18 per month (over the two-year contract) for subscribers that Apple brings to AT&T. That means Apple could receive as much as $831 for each iPhone it sells. If you believe some projections of 45 million iPhone sales in 2009, that gets us pretty close to our revenue triple in just two years without a whole lot going on in the rest of the business.

I'm not projecting 45 million iPhone sales in 2009. I am expecting a price drop for the iPhone and possibly a decline in revenue sharing. But I think the iPhone, like the iPod, is a great way to leverage sales of Mac products, is a great way to leverage sales of software and peripherals, and so on.

So if Apple's sales triple, what happens to the stock? I wish I could say it would triple, too, but of course a lot of enthusiasm and expectation is factored into the current price. With so much revenue coming from an AT&T kickback with a 100% gross margin, we should see Apple improve its net and cash flow margins.

Apple produced about $5.33 in free cash flow per share in fiscal 2007, and the stock trades at about 33 times this figure. If the 19.7% free cash flow margin it produced this year holds steady, it will have about $14.2 billion in free cash flow in 2012. Even at 4% annual dilution (about the rate it's had during the past five years), that's $13.12 per share in free cash flow. Trading at just 20 times that figure will put the stock over $260 per share.

Risks
There's a lot of variability in that analysis. I am counting on the continued success of the iPhone and the Mac, so some iPhone killer like the "Android" phone under way at Google (NAS: GOOG) could hurt Apple, though imitators certainly never derailed the iPod. Could Mac penetration start heading south again after some stunning gains? It's possible, although now that Macs have Intel (NAS: INTC) processors, users have the flexibility of running Mac and Windows software with no relative heartache.

But here's what the above projections don't account for: new products -- the types of innovations that spurred an annual bottom line growth rate of 122% during the past five years. It doesn't account for new twists on existing business, like additional carriers, "unlocked" phones (those that aren't beholden to a single carrier), or dual-mode cell/Wi-Fi phones. Those are just a few of the modest innovations on existing products that could skew things further in Apple's favor. I also don't pretend to know the mind of Steve Jobs, a CEO I very much admire and who has proved time and again that he can outfox expectations.

Though I'm not a Mac fanatic -- or Machead, as they're known around our office -- I recognize and appreciate the loyalty. It's what makes Apple one of the most powerful and beloved brands in the world and what makes it the type of great company I want in my portfolio (I own Apple stock, though it was my kids who picked it out for me!). It's the kind of company you can -- and should -- hold for a long period to smooth out the volatility that comes with high expectations. This is not for short-term investors.

The Foolish Bottom Line
It's never too late to own a great company. And although businesses with market caps north of $100 billion usually fall off my radar, Apple maneuvers like a much smaller company. World-class management and unparalleled products make this one worth owning, and reasonable projections of future cash flow based on current product lines suggest solid returns are ahead. But will Apple really just be selling its current products five years from now? I can't imagine so.

It's one of the best design firms in the world, and it takes fast-evolving technology and turns it into products that people have to own. That's what will keep this company on top -- and that's how Apple will continue to surprise us.

-- David Gardner, January 18, 2008

Get the latest on Apple in our new premium research report on the company. In it, our top technology analyst walks through the key aspects of the Apple story, including both opportunities and risks facing the company.

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The article 1 Simple Belief That Resulted in a 4-Bagger originally appeared on Fool.com.

John Reeves owns shares of Apple, Google, and AT&T. You can follow him on Twitter @TenBaggers.The Motley Fool owns shares of Intel, Apple, and Google. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of Intel, Apple, and Google, as well as creating a bull call spread position in Apple. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days.

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