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E-commerce in China was considered a settled frontier when PDD was founded. Alibaba had half the market, and JD, a quarter. In a decade, they've come to account for a quarter of the market, which is the largest in the world. How?
They aggregated and standardized consumer demand in bulk which allowed them to auction it directly to factories and farmers. This model is inherently superior to the traditional search model because it not only eliminates the middlemen but the inventory risk faced by the producers.
The incumbents were slow to respond for fear of damaging their core businesses, which were monetized via retailers and search results.
By the time it was apparent how large of a threat this new model was, PDD had already achieved critical mass. Like Google, PDD operates in a winner takes all market. This is because they reap not only the standard economies of scale in the form of leverage over fixed costs, but higher revenue per user as they scale since more liquidity in suppliers means more price discovery on the ads side.
The model is now being exported in Temu which is consistently the most downloaded shopping app in the world. The global incumbents are in the same position that Alibaba and JD were.
Like Alphabet in its early days, PDD is strategically secretive so we don't know how fast Temu is growing. But despite the mature China business probably dominating the BS, as well as headwinds from the trade war with China, PDD's working capital balance (which is massively negative, and I use as a proxy for the size of the business since it isn't as affected by how much they're monetizing) is still growing at around 20%, implying the incumbents are ceding share.
The business is a total cash gusher since consumers and suppliers alike pay up front for services delivered later, and as such, the company is debt free despite the enormous capital requirements involved with scaling Temu. The largest cost there is user acquisition.
Since the users are basically long lived assets, selling and marketing expense should be capitalized and amortized in an economic sense. Even if THE ENTIRETY of PDD's historical selling and marketing expense were capitalized as an INDEFINITE LIVED ASSET, returns on capital consistently exceed 50%.
As for the China risk: less than a quarter of PDD's revenues are attributable to its VIE. Investors must come to their own conclusions about owning Chinese equities. I'm in the camp that believes the long term trend in China's markets (and position globally in general) are improving. But even compared to other Chinese assets, PDD appears DEEPLY undervalued which we will get to now.
The market cap is $145 billion but if you net the company's cash, short term investments, and long term investments (which are basically all just deposits and government debt) against that you end up paying $75 billion. Meanwhile on a GAAP basis, before the interest income, the company is netting $11 billion before taxes.
As I mentioned before, from an economic perspective, the bulk of their R&D and S&M is discretionary investment and should be capitalized. If you were to capitalize only the selling and marketing as having a three year life, EBIT would be $17 billion. With a five year life, EBIT would be $20 billion.
COMPARED TO A $75 BILLION ENTERPRISE VALUE. AND TEMU IS JUST REACHING PROFITABILITY NOW. It is so nascent, it was launched like 2 or 3 years ago. It's still in the growth hacking phase. Just wait until they're done reinvesting into the logistics, quality control, etc.
The next big question is why management isn't buying back a shit ton of stock. And the answer is THIS COMPANY IS ONLY A DECADE OLD. THE CASTLE IS STILL BEING BUILT. USER ACQUISITION WILL COST A LOT OF MONEY BUT AS STATED EARLIER HAS MASSIVE RETURNS EVEN IF CAPITALIZED AS AN INDEFINITE LIVED ASSET.
It's the classic big tech playbook. As you scale, reinvest what you can of the cash gusher, because its winner takes all so you better seize it, then buy adjacencies to strengthen the moat, and only then do you return capital. The team is disciplined and can obviously execute. The founder, who still owns a quarter of the equity, is a value investor and I recommend you read some of his writings.
Or don't. What do I care. Why am I writing this? I don't know. I'm already full ported into this fucker on margin too baby. Munger style. We'll see who's right in a couple years. Have a good night