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Amazon Threat Is Spurring Money Managers to Invest in Underdogs

Fear of competition from the FAANGs can spur too much selling in less-exciting companies, despite their strong fundamentals.
Amazon fulfilment centre | Source: Amazon
By
  • Bloomberg

SEATTLE, United States — The FAANGs remain all the rage for many investors, but some money managers are more interested in the companies seen as shattered in their wake.

Their strategy is to capitalise on stocks hurt by overreaction to disruption from the tech giants. One manager has assembled an “Amazon Threat Basket.” Another sees the Netflix “wet blanket” effect spelling opportunities.

Call it what you will, these managers believe the downtrodden can outperform the trendier FAANGs. Fear of competition from Facebook Inc., Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Netflix Inc. and Google parent Alphabet Inc. can spur too much selling in less-exciting companies with solid fundamentals, including names like O’Reilly Automotive Inc. and dental-parts supplier Henry Schein Inc.

“It’s a case of mistaken identity,” Abhay Deshpande, chief investment officer of $570 million Centerstone Investors, said in an interview. “Sometimes it’s like a portfolio of misfit toys.”

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The FAANGs have been favoured by hedge funds and other mega investors as they’ve soared in recent years, though they struggled during last month’s market tumult.

As Amazon stormed into new industries, investors “were in a ‘shoot first ask questions later’ mode” with companies caught in its crosshairs, Deshpande wrote in a September 30 letter to clients.

Deshpande’s fund, which only wagers on stocks it believes will rise, started the threat basket more than a year ago. Along with O’Reilly and Henry Schein, holdings include industrial-parts distributor W.W. Grainger Inc., grocer Royal Ahold Delhaize NV and Target Corp.

Henry Schein typifies the anti-FAANGs. In November 2017, the stock was swept up in an industry downturn after a Citigroup analyst warned of Amazon’s looming threat. Though Henry Schein’s short interest recently surged, the shares have rebounded 27 percent since the sell-off.

The strategy doesn’t always pan out. Take CVS Health Corp., which was an older holding that Centerstone shifted to the “threat” basket when the drugstore chain bought insurer Aetna. The position lost value before Centerstone sold out this June.

FAANG Frenzy

Amazon has been a busy disruptor as it increases its fashion offerings, not to mention its expansion into groceries, health care, delivery logistics, film and television, and maybe even brick-and-mortar cinemas.

“You see a lot of shorting of companies disintermediated by the FAANGs,” said Jeffrey Vale, chief investment officer of Infinity Capital Partners, which invests in hedge funds.

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Every time Amazon says they're going to get into something, we look.

The idea of going long on some of those stocks is newer. “It means you are probably going against consensus, which is good — especially as we saw crowded trades really hurt hedge funds in October,” Vale said.

Stocks that investors saw as unfairly penalised by Amazon fears range from a sporting-goods chain to an auto-parts company.

Discovery Inc.

Netflix is a “wet blanket” for media company Discovery Inc., Tony Scherrer, a portfolio manager at $2.3 billion Smead Capital Management, said in an interview. Discovery has traded relatively cheaply because people view Netflix as a huge threat to traditional TV.

“If you aren’t Netflix, you get discounted in Old Media Land almost across the board,” he recently told Bloomberg Radio.

But investors may have missed Discovery’s potential all-platform approach. In September, the stock posted its biggest intraday rally in years after the company won a deal to provide programming to Hulu. Discovery also has partnered with Dish’s Sling TV and AT&T’s DirecTV Now, and may launch its own streaming service.

Hibbett Sports

Family office Adaptable Capital Management is betting long on Hibbett Sports Inc., a heavily shorted sporting-goods company with more than 1,000 US stores.

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“People either love it or hate it as a stock, and part of the reason is the perceived threat of Amazon,” said Paul Carter, who runs the portfolio. “People believe they are no longer going to go and shop for athletic shoes at the store. I don’t think that’s the case.”

Hibbett has tumbled to about $19 from an all-time high of almost $68 in December 2013. Carter said the shares are worth $25.

Amazon Babies

At Fenimore Asset Management, “Amazon Babies,” not FAANGs, are the way forward.

“They are the babies getting thrown out with the bathwater,” said Drew Wilson, co-manager of the FAM Value Fund. The $2.9 billion firm counts Henry Schein, Dollar General Corp. and AutoZone Inc. among the babies.

Speculation about Amazon jumping into auto-parts distribution sparked a sell-off last year among the likes of AutoZone.

“The people who buy auto parts are DIY-ers and commercial buyers, and they need parts in 30 minutes or less,” Wilson said. “Amazon cannot do that, and it will be a long time before they can.”

Wilson said he also capitalised when Dollar General was dragged down over Amazon’s 2017 acquisition of Whole Foods. Dollar General is growing in rural areas abandoned by traditional grocery stores.

“The Whole Foods threat wasn’t going to affect them,” he said.

Fenimore has invested heavily in its Amazon babies over the past 18 months. In that time, its FAM Value Fund, which buys these and other stocks, has returned 15 percent.

With chief executive officer Jeffrey Bezos showing no inclination to slow Amazon’s expansion, Wilson expects more opportunities to arise.

“I don’t think the market has lost that itchy finger yet,” he said. “Every time Amazon says they’re going to get into something, we look.”

By Hema Parmar; editors: Margaret Collins, Josh Friedman, Melissa Karsh
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