Sometimes itâÂÂs best to avoid the herd altogether.
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More often than not, the herd gets things backwards and wrong.ÃÂ In fact, back in October 2019 naysayers decided to avoid Shopify (NYSE:) after the company announced a secondary offering of 1.9 million shares for $317.50 per share.
While some disagreed with me, I noted that I expected âÂÂSHOP to resume its incredible uptrend, especially as SHOP just begins to jump on the cannabis bandwagon.âÂÂ
At the time, SHOP stock traded around $311.
ItâÂÂs now up to $402 per share, thanks in large part to its more than over Black Friday and Cyber Monday.àThatâÂÂs up from the $1.8 billion it generated during the same period in 2018.
However, after the impressive run of SHOP stock in recent weeks, I nowÃÂ believe that Shopify stock is overbought and should be avoided in the near-term.
Avoid SHOP Stock in the Near-Term
At the moment, SHOP trades at over 30 times its sales, a level that has been a reliable indication of a top, as pointed out by InvestorPlace contributor Tim Biggam.
âÂÂThe current price-to-sales ratio is also of 16.08. At some point valuations do matter, especially given that revenue growth is slowing. Plus, a 30x P/S ratio is just mind boggling unto itself.âÂÂ
Shopify stock is also trading at a PEG ratio of 36 and 15 times its book value.
Also, technically, after refilling a bearish gap dating back to early September 2019, itâÂÂs become stretched at its upper Bollinger Band (2,20), with over-extensions on relative strength (RSI), MACD, and Williamsâ %R (W%R). Going forward, I believe Shopify stock could drop back to its 50-day moving average of $324 per share.
SHOP Will Grow Over the Long-TermÃÂ
While there are plenty of concerns about the valuation of Shopify stock, SHOP will grow a great deal over the long-term.àWe have to consider that over time, giving SHOP stock the opportunity to benefit from incredible growth, as IâÂÂve noted in a previous column.
According toàeMarketer, global e-commerce will riseàto $3.535 billion. By 2021, global e-commerce could reach $5 trillion.àWe must also remember that retailâÂÂs future is online.àAs smaller brick-and-mortar companies wake up to that fact, theyâÂÂll turn to Shopify.
SHOPâÂÂs Growth Has Been Nothing Short of Impressive
In October, Shopify announced that more than 1 million merchants are now using its platform. âÂÂ,â CEO Tobi Lutke said. àâÂÂI had an investor who ended up not investing because they told me that the worldwide market for online stores was about 40,000 stores.àSo, itâÂÂs just amazing to zoom out and see what happened, how many people are building their businesses, from every downtown area in every city, to the most remote islands in the middle of the Atlantic.âÂÂ
That shows that ShopifyâÂÂs business is accelerating.àIn February 2019, the company announced it had 800,000 customers.àShopify also reported that its Q3 net revenue had jumped 45% year-over-year to $390 million.àHowever, that was a slowdown from the 48% revenue YoY growth in Q2.
Then again, itâÂÂs natural for growth rates to ebb and flow.
At the same time, SHOP did post a Q3 net operating loss of $72.8 million, which shocked investors. However, that was caused by a one-time tax charge associated with intellectual property issues.
In addition, SHOPâÂÂs MMR, or , did increase 34% YoY to $60.7 million, as of September 2019.
âÂÂOur strong results in the quarter were driven in part by the success of our international expansion, which is just one of the many ways we are investing in the platform,â said Amy Shapero, ShopifyâÂÂs CFO. âÂÂBy carefully balancing these multiple opportunities that have different investment time horizons, we can keep investing in the innovations that will power merchants in the future while helping them grow rapidly today.âÂÂ
The Bottom Line on SHOP Stock
In the near-term, IâÂÂd avoid SHOP stock due to its valuation and technical overextension.
However,àI still believe that Shopify stock should be bought on a pullback and then held for the long-term.àRemember, brick-and-mortar retailers are moving online, which will benefit SHOP. Secondly, the value of global e-commerce growth could reach $5 trillion in the next two years. Finally, the companyâÂÂs customer base is increasing meaningfully.àIn fact, it went from just 800,000 in February 2019 to 1 million in October. All of that makes it tough to argue against long-term growth.
Again, in the near-term, avoid SHOP stock.àHowever, itâÂÂs a strong buy on pullbacks.
As of this writing, Ian Cooper did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.
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The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.