Celsius Stock Analysis: Is it the Next Monster Beverage?

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • Celsius (CELH) has done incredibly well over the last 5 years and the comparison to Monster Beverage is definitely here. However, recently the Celsius (CELH) stock price crashed by almost 40%, and the growth is in question. This video covers my full analysis, including a Discounted cash flow (DCF) model.
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Комментарии • 16

  • @drewshegda34
    @drewshegda34 9 дней назад

    I like Celcius at its current valuation of $38 per share. Great analysis, thanks!

  • @ekko9964
    @ekko9964 10 дней назад

    thank you for sharing. i hope u do revisit the company again in the future

  • @babyprince84uk
    @babyprince84uk 28 дней назад

    Thanks a lot for the informative video

  • @barryaherne215
    @barryaherne215 Месяц назад +2

    I'm not sure if this had been brought up in previous earnings calls, but I have seen Celsius in China, so they have a market there, too. That being said, in my local Chinese supermarket, Monster are front and centre, you cannot miss them; they are in the drinks aisle, they are in the fridges dotted around the supermarket, and they are in a large stand before the checkouts, and in small fridges *at* the checkout. I found Celsius by accident in one of the drinks aisles, but only because I was looking for a Gatorade.
    Now, this isn't to say anything bad about Celsius, but they are up against a juggernaut. Their brand is also a little bland. Is it water, is it fruit, it's not clear at a glance. Red Bull has extreme sports, Monster has gaming and an element of the fitness world. Celsius has what? It really needs work in this area.
    Unrelated, but I'm a little surprised that Red Bull is so high when you can buy generic supermarket brand alternatives for a quarter of the price. Part of Monster's strength is the abundance of flavours, especially their sugar free options, so I'm a little shocked that one-flavour RB dominates.

    • @kostadin_ristovski
      @kostadin_ristovski  Месяц назад

      Thank you for sharing your experience. Also, thank you for sharing your thoughts, those are all very good points.

    • @babyprince84uk
      @babyprince84uk 28 дней назад

      I saw it also in Saudi Arabia (in more than occasion).
      Also, If I remember correctly, I saw a comment for someone saw it in Holland.
      This worries me as if they have already expanded to some countries. This will further limit their growth horizon.

  • @IntoWhite
    @IntoWhite 25 дней назад

    Great video and analysis. One thing I don't understand are your free cash flow numbers. You have CELH doing $174m FCF next year but according to my data CELH has already done $245m FCF over the last 12 months. That is CFO minus CAPEX. So I feel your FCF numbers are far too conservative?

    • @kostadin_ristovski
      @kostadin_ristovski  25 дней назад

      Hi there, thank you for your question. There are two reasons for that:
      1. The starting point of the FCF that I use is operating profit. This means, I also take the share-based expense into account, which isn't in the operating cash flow. This is my approach to include the dilution that arises from that.
      2. If you have a look at the operating cash flow, you'll notice a lot of different lines. One of them, for example, is "Accrued promotional allowance". Only in H1-2024, the liability for it increased by $57m, hence, there was no cash outflow for it, but there will be in the coming quarters. Another one, is inventories. This decreased during H1-2024 by $34m (impacting the operating cash flow in the other direction). However, if the company is expected to grow, it isn't possible to do so by decreasing inventory. So, based on my analysis, the last twelve months aren't representative of the long-term cash flow potential, due to these events, that will have opposite impact in the years to come.
      I hope this helps!

    • @IntoWhite
      @IntoWhite 24 дня назад

      @@kostadin_ristovski Ok that makes sense thank you. Don't you think the reinvestment amount is too high? You have $118m next year, Celsius total CAPEX over the last 12 months is only $24 million.

    • @kostadin_ristovski
      @kostadin_ristovski  24 дня назад

      @@IntoWhite The reinvestment in my case, includes capex + increase in working capital (such as inventories, receivables, etc.).
      This is based on "Sales/capital ratio", which gives an idea of how much capital is required, for each $1 of sales. In this case, the ratio is 3, meaning the company needs to invest $1 to support $3 in sales. If the sales grow by $3,000, then $1,000 investment is required, etc.

  • @gorandamchevski
    @gorandamchevski Месяц назад +1

    Didn't know PEP is a key player :)
    Plugged in some numbers on my side, 30% growth next year, 25% for the 4 years after that, converging on a terminal rate in Y-10. End up with revenues of $8B
    Assume EBIT reaches 23%, I get an intrinsic value of 12B by using an initial 10% discount.
    Seems the company is trading at a slight premium, but the key question to answer is HOW will Celsius get from $1.4B to $8B in sales. I have seen optimistic growth assumptions with SAM before and it didn't end well. Again, answering the HOW is key for Celsius - I'm not saying it won't grow, I just lack the info to make a judgement.
    Great video, thank you!

    • @kostadin_ristovski
      @kostadin_ristovski  Месяц назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed the video Goran. Indeed, there's a lot of uncertainty and the future growth is the key variable.

    • @leonardoghini1782
      @leonardoghini1782 Месяц назад +1

      Great video, as usual!

    • @kostadin_ristovski
      @kostadin_ristovski  Месяц назад

      @@leonardoghini1782 Thank you!

    • @giorgospapadopoulos7709
      @giorgospapadopoulos7709 Месяц назад

      If they go for international expansion, bye bye margin, but quadrupling in 10 years is not a small fit.