Who is eating at the OpenTable?

by Kris_Tuttle on May 29, 2009

We just pub­lished a research snap­shot on OpenTable (OPEN — $28.75) which includes our typ­i­cal intrin­sic val­u­a­tion analy­sis as well as a view of the com­pany.   Unfor­tu­nately for cur­rent investors the com­pany is worth about 65% less than it’s cur­rently trad­ing at in the market.

This is explained in good part to the fact that you can’t short the stock and there are no options as yet since they just came pub­lic.  But all this does is delay the inevitable decline to much lower prices before new long-term investors can buy shares.

We saw the same head-scratching results when Net­suite came pub­lic early in 2008.  The shares amazed every­one by trad­ing at $40 (our fairly in depth Net­suite pre-IPO report ($) sug­gested they were worth $12.)

Of course Mr. Mar­ket is not per­fect but who is on the other side of this mar­ket buy­ing the shares at these lev­els?  Have they done any val­u­a­tion work?  Since there is no research avail­able from the bro­kers yet are they hop­ing for the impos­si­ble which would be a “buy” rec­om­men­da­tion at these prices?

The road ahead is fairly well known which is a few months of price declines as bro­kers come out with their “hold” or absurdly ten­u­ous “buy” rat­ings, short-sellers are able to bor­row shares and the huge piles of VC shares escape the lock-up and come into the market.

If you are or know of who buys stocks like this at these lev­els please send us an email or leave a com­ment.  We have a bunch of other things that you or they might want to buy!  ;-)

Our full report was sent to Research 2.0 clients but is also avail­able for pur­chase via the link below.  At the same time our intrin­sic value work­sheet and a full com­pany model built buy Vir­tua Research are avail­able for pur­chase as well.  The eas­i­est thing to do is sign up as a client but we know that many pre­fer the a la carte solu­tion that the store offers.

Full report link($)

Full com­pany model ($) with tabs for every­thing used in build­ing a model.

[Dis­clo­sure: At the time of this writ­ing Research 2.0 has no posi­tion in the shares of OpenTable.]

{ 2 comments }

mike May 29, 2009 at 4:52 PM

“This is explained in good part to the fact that you can’t short the stock”-I just checked with two brokers (one retail, one prime broker) and both have shares available to short. You may want to rethink this part of your thesis.

Kris_Tuttle June 17, 2009 at 2:37 PM

Your brokers are better than mine! Of course in this case size does matter so knowing if they have 100 or 100,000 shares available makes a difference.

The real issue though is supply and demand. Right now supply is very limited and will remain so until the lockups come off. Then millions more shares are available for sale and help to establish a more robust market clearing price.

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