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Source: Afterpay Touch investor presentation 26 February 2019. No doubt the US push will hit some bumps along way as competitors and regulators take increasing notice. More capital might also be required to help support growth. Still, I can think of worse things than raising additional equity to support significant growth into a huge and growing market, and while regulatory risk remains real, it also comes with the territory of investing in disruptive companies. Plus, as the recent experience with regulators in Australia and New Zealand highlights, not every brush with regulators proves a showstopper.2. Late fees and gross losses are moving in the right direction. Afterpay probably silenced some critics today by revealing that late fee income as a percentage of Afterpay’s total statutory income shrank from 22.5% to 17.6%. Gross losses as a percentage of underlying sales also fared well as they shrunk from 1.6% to 1.1% on a pro-forma basis. Combined with other gives and takes, the net transaction margin stayed flat year-on-year at 2.3% on a pro-forma basis, which is striking considering the capping of late fees and rapid scaling into the US and new verticals in the Australian market.3. Afterpay UK is set to launch soon. The company plans to launch Afterpay into the UK during the current half, which could provide another serious leg up of growth as Statista scopes the UK as the third-largest ecommerce market in the world behind the US and China. Helping the business get a running start will be Urban Outfitters, as the US-based retail giant who helped propel the impressive US launch has committed to be a launch partner into the UK. Watch this space.Our view is that, while Afterpay Touch is a business and stock with a wide range of outcomes, the market is underestimating the scope of Afterpay’s opportunity here and abroad.According to Australia Post, online shopping in Australia only amounted to 8% of total traditional retail sales at the end of 2017, while Goldman Sachs estimates that the US online fashion market in 2017 was around 20 times the size of Australia’s. Meanwhile, Afterpay has also successfully expanded into physical stores and new verticals such as travel and healthcare.On top of new markets, channels, and verticals, Afterpay has call options around new products for both merchants and consumers. For example, it isn’t hard to picture Afterpay creating an ad business at some point given that Afterpay is now already the second-largest traffic driver behind Google in Australia. We also think Afterpay could leverage its strong brand equity to follow the lead of US rival Affirm by offering savings accounts to its users, around 85% of whom plug debit cards into their Afterpay accounts.Many investors are skeptical of how Afterpay would navigate an Australian recession, which is a valid concern considering the business model has not been tested across an economic cycle. The business is no longer a purely Australian story, though, and grows more global by the day. For that matter, because the payback periods on Afterpay purchases are so short, the company can quickly adapt to a softening environment by tightening its standards, simultaneously reducing default rates and gross leverage.Again, this is a business with a very wide range of outcomes, and they don’t all have happy endings. Still, we think the business could grow faster and for longer than many expect, and as patient investors with a tolerance for a good deal of volatility we are willing to wait and see what happens. |