Amazon ‘terrifies me as a company’, says a valuation professor

FAN Editor

Amazon continues to break records. On Thursday, the company reported earnings per share of $5.07 compared with $2.50 as expected by Thomson Reuters.

But Aswath Damodaran, a professor of corporate finance and valuation at the Stern School of Business at New York University, who is sometimes referred to as the “Dean of Valuation,” said this is not all good news.

“Amazon terrifies me as a company,” Damodaran told CNBC on “Fast Money” Thursday.

“You find it overvalued but you cannot bet against it because this is a disruption machine,” he said. “I’m not even sure what business the company is in anymore. It’s a platform that can be used pretty much to disrupt any business. And that’s what’s being priced in.”

Sales in the company grew 49 percent year-over-year to $6.1 billion. Total revenue also includes sales from Whole Foods, which was about $4.3 billion in the quarter. Amazon recently moved into the health care space by acquiring PillPack.

Shares of the e-commerce giant closed about 3 percent down, but soared more than 4 percent during Thursday after hours trading.

Amazon could not immediately be reached for a comment.

Meanwhile, other FANG (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google) tech giants fell on Thursday.

Facebook missed projections on revenue and daily active users during the quarter, which caused the stock to fall more than 24 percent after the report. The trouble continued on Thursday as shares fell as much as 19 percent. Global daily active users rose to 1.47 billion, up from 1.45 billion. Still, the platform lost users in Europe, and active users in North America were flat.

“After one of the worst quarters, in terms of PR, that a company’s had, I was surprised that the user numbers actually went up,” Damodaran said.

“After April, the market seemed to have forgotten all about the privacy scandal and gone back to business as usual. And I think they got a surprise yesterday that they deserve,” he added.

He felt that a better measure of the company’s success is the number of hours people spend on Facebook, but said that those numbers were still unknown.

Still, he said the stock is undervalued, and right now is a good time to buy with share prices down to around $180.

Facebook could not immediately be reached for comment.

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Judge allows lawsuit against citizenship question on the 2020 census to proceed

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross had the authority to reintroduce the citizenship question on the 2020 census but, in exercising that authority, may have violated the rights of plaintiffs who are now suing, a federal judge ruled Thursday. U.S. District Judge Jesse M. Furman for the Southern District of New York […]