Something that really seems to be lacking these days in business is integrity. Everyone seems to be out chasing the short term gain and satisfaction. Eventually this attitude always costs those who pursue it. Sure, it may seem like you are winning in the short term, but in the long term it's usually a mistake. Recently, we wrote an article on the incredible Beyond Meat stock rise. We tried to be fair in giving the stock a price target of $100/share. But, then the plant-based meat company announced that they will be offering 250,000 new shares and that existing shareholders will be selling 3 million. Some of Beyond Meat's biggest shareholders are selling, including venture capital firms Obvious Ventures and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. The two plan to sell parts of their stake, selling almost 705,000 of Kleiner's 7.75 million shares and over 405,000 of Obvious' 4.46 million respectively, if both firms exercise their rights. Kleiner's stake was worth about $194 million at the BYND IPO and is now worth around a colossal $1.5 billion! How is this possible when the lockup expires Oct. 29th you ask? Underwriters like Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan allowed them to waive it in order to take advantage of the overblown stock rise. Clearly CEO Ethan Brown and CFO Mark Nelson looked to capitalize on the outrageous stock move at the cost of many traders, investors, and even their own employees. In business there is something called ETHICS. Investors should have learned a hard lesson after the Elon Musk $420 buyout tweet situation. Never marry a stock and certainly do not form a "bromance" with the Founder/CEO of a company. Being so caught up in a personality and the hype surrounding them can blind you from reality. It cost many investors dearly who owned stock in Tesla. Moreover, certain stock related moves will make people question a brands integrity and can cause lasting damage. Hurting people that support you is a dangerous thing. BYND has only been trading for a few months and they could have already done irreparable damage! Wall Street related media has been pumping this damn thing to no end since the IPO opened for trading. Sadly, Jim Cramer recently spun the Ethan Brown/Beyond Meat situation positively as if the recent shifty moves were a plus for investors. Killing the stock price is not exactly a good thing and should be a big warning sign. Jim may or may not have been trying to help his old pals over at Goldman Sachs, who happen to be underwriters on the deal. And what is with these ridiculous so called "analysts" raising price targets when they know damn well the stock price is beyond ridiculous even after the recent fire sale? Reminds me of the credit rating agencies that were inflating credit ratings of sub-prime mortgages leading up to the financial crisis. Seems like these jokers need to get into another line of work. It's becoming a real embarrassment!
In light of the shocking recent discounted public offering, there is now cause to question whether or not this entire fiasco could possibly have been orchestrated to squeeze shorts and run up the stock price for the secondary/follow-on offering. Sadly, this is not uncommon. This was most likely not just "dumb money" chasing as many claimed in the media, but was probably much more organized. People throw around the term "short squeeze" pretty loosely, but often do not understand it. Short squeezes don't just happen. Someone has to do the squeezing by creating pressure and in my opinion this might have been a professional job. It could be market makers, big money retail traders, combined dumb money chasers, underwriters themselves, or even a combination. Sometimes companies themselves will put out PR's claiming they cannot even explain suspicious price action in their own stock, although more often than not, they probably do know. Often times there is some larger player using algo programs to create the upward move and force the shorts to buy to cover and low float stocks with high short interest are always a big target. We noticed on level 2, a lot of automated tiny trades that seemed to be used just to keep pressure on shorts. A stocks price technically just represents the last price it traded for. So, whether someone buys 10 or 10,000 shares of BYND stock at $150, that is considered the current price (number of shares doesn't matter). So, it would make sense to use the smallest number of shares possible to push the stock price up (it's much cheaper and has the same effect). If a big fish had a large stake, it would be highly lucrative to trickle it up with light buys to increase the value of the holdings and cost of doing so would be minimal. The more it is done on a daily basis, the higher the stakes value becomes. As the price rises, some of the shares are unloaded and the process is repeated. Often times, this is why you will see a float turnover several times in a day. Whales can start dumping the fresh shares they bought at the beginning of the day and then buy them back. All the while, the overall value of the initial IPO investment gets higher and higher and they are banking on the trading as well. It's really quite a game and possible it may have been taking place with BYND. Potential culprits could be those that stand to benefit the most - the underwriters or early large investors. In our opinion, waiving lockups is dirty pool and should be an illegal practice. There is no point in having a lockup period if underwriters are just going to waive it as soon execs or investors decide to take advantage of a large price rise (whether expected or unexpected). The sneakiness sets a precedent that will be followed by others. Due to what we feel are unethical business practices by greedy BYND insiders, we are dropping our price target from $100 to $65. It's pretty clear the stock has been far too over-hyped by Wall Street and we will continue to attack with shorts/puts on any push the controllers create. It's pretty obvious Beyond Meat has been putting out more press releases than Elon Musk has been given government grants. Company CEO's are now more like technical traders and Elon has set the tone. As long as CEO's are compensated mostly for stock performance this remains an issue. Always keep in mind, the most important aspect of an investing decision is competent management. And that management must take the long term view. They need to stop attempting to pump their stock and focus on building the business, ethical management, taking care of employees, and growing the business through creative and useful products as opposed to focusing on profiting from short term price moves. This can and will end up in long term disaster - hence the Tesla situation. Another interesting consideration is whether or not some of these players took a short position ahead of the offering. It is about time the SEC require large short positions to be reported for market transparency. Traders and investors deserve to know when a whale is taking on a large short. These non-transparent shadow moves are getting out of control and with the use of tools such as dark pools, Wall Street is becoming LESS transparent, not more! When a company pulls a suspect action, they should be punished via selling/shorting and by refusal to buy their product or service. This is always the best way to get their attention. After these Elon Musk like moves, we might even have to start using the ticker "BYNDQ" going forward. In terms of earnings, revenues jumped nicely about 290% (expected with recent partnerships), but gross margin widened to 34% from 15% a year ago. However, this hardly justifies a valuation over $10 billion. It does appear bigger fish are now taking the stock down with controlled selling, but want to avoid spooking bulls too much. Many are still waiting for the Oct. 29th lockup expire to begin selling. As these shares get unloaded, nasty squeezes are being created every now and then to scare shorts and keep them honest. Again, this entire situation could be much more designed than anyone would believe. Unfortunately, there is just no way to know all of the details, unless you are someone who is a part of it. The message to companies like Beyond Meat is basically to have some damn integrity. Don't make moves that hurt others and damage your brand right out of the gate. Slipping in a sneaky public offering at a very discounted price through way of waived lockup is pure nastiness and could be costly in the long run. In our opinion, this company is now up there with the Riot Blockchains of the world. Short research groups are going to be on them like white on rice and it's well deserved! Ethan Brown and Mark Nelson know damn well that BYND stock will probably never be close to recent prices again and they wanted to capitalize. Insiders probably would have dumped a lot more shares if it wouldn't have looked like outright robbery. They knew the move would crush many traders and investors alike. Sure, initial investors who bought in on the IPO are still well in the green, but many supporters came in later and took beatings when the stock quickly tanked on offering news. We did our best to alert traders/investors on social media and in our initial Beyond Meat article that this could be a stairs up, elevator down scenario. In the last 12 months, secondary offerings came in at a 6% discount on average. The BYND offering price (which was finally released during this writing) is $160 per share, representing a very steep discount of almost 30% from where the price was ($220 area) when the offering was announced with earnings. The stock price is dropping after hours and hit lows of about $183 (still highly overvalued and can head much lower). Another questionable move was the offering price being delayed a few days, probably to buy more time for large sellers before people realized how steep the discount actually was. A New SEC rule should be implemented requiring public companies to release the exact offering price when first announcing. These tactics are clearly meant to deceive and we should not stand for it! Our advice to newer businesses (public or private) is to stop focusing on the short term temptation and focus on the long term game plan. You will end up winning as far too many fail by concentrating on the short road to instant gratification! Whether a startup, mid sized company, or large corporation, there are numerous examples of those that took the short term path and ended up going to $0!
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It's safe to say the recent IPO of Beyond Meat (BYND) has been a real winner for those who bought on the IPO and have held the stock up until this point. The stock has had an astronomical ride from the $25 IPO price to nearly $150 per share on the Friday squeeze. By any comparison, this is a very successful IPO. Congratulations are in order for the bulls who have made big money! Many people do not quite understand what's going on with this move, so maybe I can shed some light on the situation. There are several reasons why the stock has moved so far "beyond" belief...
1. With disappointing IPO's like Lyft and Uber, Wall Street needed a runner. 2. There is a cult like following from the vegan millennial crowd. 3. The float of the stock is pretty small for the stock price. 4. There is a high short interest which makes a stock much more squeezable. 5. It is a "story stock" that a wide range of people can understand. 6. It is not easy to get shorts and the interest is expensive for borrows. 7. The stock has been talked up greatly on televised and social media. 8. There are a lot of celebrities invested who have been hyping the stock. While we recognize and understand why this stock has had legs, we also recognize that the stock has going far "beyond" where it should be priced. Early shorts have been taking a beating. Even famed short seller Andrew Left of Citron Research (whom I usually agree with) was sucked in early on this fiasco knowing that this was the exact type of story stock that he generally recommends staying away from. No trader can always get it right and lets be straight...In this dull bull market with politicians, corporations, deep state, and Fed behind it, short sellers have really not had much of a voice. It is what it is though. It's just the nature of the beast in this business we call "stock trading." With all of the volume and interest in this stock, it is great for trading. Unfortunately, the options have terrible spreads of nearly $3 at times. You can still play these, but need to get entry on the mid price. If the bid is $8 and ask is $11, place a limit order for $9.50. Up at these absurd levels, it may be good to take puts a few months out, but hedge by buying and trading some short term calls at support levels. Valuation: Obviously low float stocks in a hot area can move well "beyond" what makes sense in terms of valuation. This is important as all of these overblown runners do eventually come back to reality. We saw this with the cannabis stocks when many exploded to outrageous multi-billion dollar valuations. Stocks like Tilray (TLRY) started with an IPO price of $25, ran up to $300, and is now back into the $30 area. Anyone with sense knows these types of valuations are not reasonable. Lets be honest, there is a lot of dumb money chasing BYND up here. But in this market however, the dumb money is making money! A lot of millennial's that don't usually trade have poured into this stock just like they did with cannabis. This has aided in creating massive short squeezes. With only $40 million in revenues, a $9 billion current market cap is "beyond" ridiculous. This is just plain fact and is even more unreasonable than Tilray market cap was near $300. The company also posted a $6 million loss and therefore is not profitable. Smart money will be taking profits after the recent earnings move. They will then wait for a solid correction and buy back in to hold as an investment if they believe in the long term viability of the company. Product: There is certainly a trend among Americans (especially millennial's) of staying away from meat. And I do agree that there is good reason (killing methods, hormone injection, health concerns, etc). From an ingredients perspective, the burger it not really any healthier than other options and apparently the company itself does not claim health benefits. Fat and sodium content is about as high as a regular burger for example. In this Business Insider article, they explain that these plant-based burgers are not much healthier than fast-food burgers. Furthermore, despite what some claim, there is competition in this space and more is coming from some big players. Impossible Burger is just one example. In a four ounce uncooked Beyond Burger patty you will find the following...
Bottom Line: We believe this stock is due for a reasonable correction of at least 25% and so our target is $100 in the shorter term. BYND has already run well above most analysts amplified targets. Be smart and take some money off of the table. If you are reaping gains, avoid the urge to be too greedy. Do not forget what happened to those who got greedy with cannabis stocks like Tilray. They are now just wishing they locked in gains when they were there! Look more at puts and short opportunities up at these levels. Trade the stock based on support and resistance. And always keep in mind that "bulls make money, bears make money, but pigs get slaughtered." Good luck to all players long and short! *If you enjoyed this content, please share or comment below. Any feedback is greatly appreciated. Thank you!
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