Now’s The Time To Buy This Discounted Tech Giant

 | Apr 01, 2018 02:23AM ET

When the market drops sharply, as it did last week, investors get the chance to buy great companies at a discount. This company has an unprecedented history of growth and profitability, along with a well-deserved reputation as one of the most advanced and innovative companies in the world. Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL: $1,070/share) is this week’s Long Idea .

GOOGL Stands Alone

We’ve written before that the ROIC ). No company combines these two factors better than GOOGL, as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: GOOGL’s Revenue and ROIC since 2008

Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings

Those numbers are simply incredible when you consider GOOGL has never earned an ROIC below 25% (the median S&P 500 stock earns an ROIC of 8%). The last time the firm grew revenue by less than 10% annually was in the depths of a recession in 2009.

Only two other S&P 500 companies can match GOOGL’s record of 25% or higher ROIC and double-digit revenue growth for each of the past five years. These two companies, Align Technology Inc (NASDAQ:ALGN) and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc (NASDAQ:REGN), both face looming patent cliffs. When it comes to sustainable growth and profitability, GOOGL has no equal.

GOOGL Has Little Competition In its Core Markets

In its core businesses, GOOGL has a market share that few other companies can match. In search, Google controls ~75% of the market. In video, YouTube has a nearly 80% market share.

GOOGL’s dominance compares favorably to the other highly touted FANG stocks. Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) has an estimated 42% market share in social media. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) controls 44% of the e-commerce market. Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) has a comparable 75% share of streaming households, but many consumers use Netflix along with competitors such as Prime Video, HBO Go, or Hulu. By comparison, few people are toggling back and forth between Google and Bing.

Google’s dominance is also self-reinforcing. Because it has the most users, websites have to optimize for its platform, which in turn makes its search results more useful than competitors’. In addition, the larger volume of searches gives Google more data it can use to further refine its algorithm.

At this point, Google is fundamentally ingrained in the process of using the internet. As long as internet usage continues to grow at a rapid pace, which it should for the foreseeable future, GOOGL’s profits will grow with it.

Continually Investing in the Future

GOOGL’s profitability is all the more remarkable when one considers how much money the company spends on projects that may not earn profits for years to come. As shown in Figure 2, GOOGL spends more on research and development than other American company.

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Figure 2: GOOGL’s R&D Spending Dwarfs the Competition

Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings

The difference in R&D spending between GOOGL and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) in second is larger than the difference between MSFT and IBM (NYSE:IBM), the company with the 13th largest R&D budget. No company is devoting more resources to innovation and future technologies than GOOGL.

Readers may notice one glaring omission from Figure 2. Amazon does not report its R&D spending and instead bundles it into a line item called “Technology and Content.” AMZN spent $22.6 billion on technology and content last year, but we know that about $4.5 billion of that went to the content budget, and AWS-related costs also make up a substantial portion. It’s hard to know just how much AMZN spends on R&D, but it’s clearly less than GOOGL.

All that R&D spending has GOOGL positioned to control key industries in the future. We’re just finishing up a series on the growing importance of artificial intelligence, and GOOGL is one of the unquestioned leaders in the field of AI.

GOOGL’s AI research is already paying off in numerous ways beyond just improving the core search experience. The company is using its technology to help customers build and train their own machine learning systems, which adds more value to a rapidly growing cloud business. It will also start renting out its AI chips soon for another avenue of monetization.

Self-driving cars represent another promising technology, and the company’s Waymo division is acknowledged as a leader in the field. The commercial potential for advanced self-driving technology is enormous, as GOOGL could license its software to automakers or partner with ride-hailing companies to provide an autonomous transportation fleet. GOOGL could even use its technology the same way it does Android, as a way to control the user experience and expand its market share as cars become more interconnected.

Beyond these technologies, the umbrella structure of Alphabet allows the company’s subsidiaries to pursue many more speculative projects, such as research into extending the human lifespan, that could end up being enormously valuable if they can make real breakthroughs.

Essentially, GOOGL’s dominance in search and video gives it an abundant funding stream to pursue technological breakthroughs while still earning fantastic profits for investors.

Bear Case: Rising Traffic Acquisition Costs and Antitrust Suits

The market has two primary concerns when it comes to GOOGL. The first is the company’s rising traffic acquisition costs (TAC), which is the money it pays to third-parties to promote its search engine. Most notably, TAC paid to Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) seems to be rising significantly as mobile searches take up a larger share of global search activity. As a result, the company’s gross margins have been in decline.

However, Figure 3 shows that the long-term trend for TAC and gross margins still looks strong. TAC as a percent of revenue has experienced a momentary spike in prior years and then continued its long-term downtrend. At the same time, gross margins have fluctuated, but stayed around 60%.

Figure 3: GOOGL’s Gross Margins and TAC as a % of Revenue Since 2004