The stock market has a long history of throwing up incredible bargains. So much so that even the fastest-growing growth names can sometimes end up looking like a value stock (in hindsight, of course).
Take PDD Holdings (NASDAQ: PDD) for example, which has just posted 144% profit growth. Yet the stockās plunged 35% in a week, leaving it on a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of just 7.5.
Is this now an unmissable bargain? Hereās my take.
What is PDD Holdings?
For those unfamiliar, this is the parent company of Pinduoduo, the gamified shopping platform in China where users get discounts by purchasing in groups. Today, itās Chinaās third-largest e-commerce company by sales, trailing only JD.com and Alibaba.
Temu, its overseas business, has spread like wildfire since it launched just two years ago. I popped on the app a few weeks ago, quickly becoming frustrated as its spinning wheel locked me in before dishing out a āfreeā product (if I spent a minimum of Ā£15).
The products were dirt cheap, but they were of varying quality when they finally arrived. Letās just say I wonāt be cancelling my Amazon Prime subscription!
Why has PPD stock crashed?
In the second quarter, the e-commerce firmās revenue surged 86% year on year to $13.4bn. Gross margin improved 1% to 65.3% while net income skyrocketed 144% to $4.4bn.
These incredible numbers were then followed by this bleak warning from management: āWhile encouraged by the solid progress we made in the past few quarters, we see many challenges aheadā.
It then laid out a load of them, ranging from rising competition to a transition away from ālow-qualityā merchants. However, one comment (from many) on the earnings call that probably spooked investors was this: āIn the long run, the decline in our profitability is inevitableā. Yikes!
A possible mirage
The stockās collapse has left it trading on a P/E ratio of just 10. Thatās the sort of multiple youād expect to see from a FTSE 100 bank, not a tech firm notching up 86% revenue growth.
The forward P/E ratio of 7.5ās actually lower than Alibaba, which is only growing in the single digits these days.
However, Iād take that figure with a pinch of salt because managementās already warned that falling earnings is āinevitableā. The ultra-low PDD valuation might well turn out to be a mirage.
Iām wary
Other things said by management highlighted why I donāt tend to invest in Chinese stocks. There was talk about being ācommitted to transitioning toward high-quality developmentā and āprepared to accept short-term sacrificesā to āvigorously support high-quality merchantsā.
Committed and prepared for sacrifices? I read this as PDD very publicly aligning itself with Beijingās authorities. Thatās understandable given that President Xi Jinping has vowed to make āhigh-quality developmentā the guiding force of the Chinese economy. Woe betide those that donāt get onboard.
This emphasises again the tightrope that Chinese tech companies must walk. The shifting sands of the regulatory environment just creates too many complexities and risks that I donāt feel comfortable with.
At $93, PDD stock could prove to be an unmissable bargain. After all, the e-commerce firmās still growing rapidly around the world. However, this is one opportunity Iām happy to let pass by.
This post was originally published on Motley Fool