Comparative valuation analysis is a catch-all model that can be used if you cannot value Beyond Meat by discounting back its dividends or cash flows. It is number one stock in beta category among related companies totaling about 1.00 of Beta per Price to Sales. The company’s revenue growth is expected to accelerate in the second half due to the introduction of new products, distribution expansion, and weaker year-ago comparisons.Beyond Meat is rated fifth in price to sales category among related companies. BYND is guiding towards a $375-$415 million revenue in 2023, implying a 1% to 10% y-o-y drop. That said, the company’s stock appears expensive at the current price. Given the changes to our revenues and RPS forecast, we have revised our Beyond Meat’s Valuation to $11 per share, based on a $6.12 expected RPS and a 1.8x P/S multiple for the fiscal year 2023 – almost 13% lower than the current market price. We now forecast revenue per share (RPS) to come in at $6.12. We forecast Beyond Meat’s Revenues to be $389 million for the fiscal year 2023, down 7% y-o-y. The only bright spot was International Foodservice, where volumes rose 115% to 5.5 million pounds. Foodservice volume saw a 7% decline to 2.6 million pounds, and International retail volumes fell 6% to 3.3 million pounds. Retail volume plunged 33% y-o-y to $8.3 million pounds, U.S. The company’s net revenue of $92 million was down almost 16% year-over-year (y-o-y). The company also saw declining volumes along with falling prices in Q1. That said, the company has a heavy focus on marketing and promotional activities, which doesn’t bode well for its margins. While the company’s gross margins improved in Q1 to 6.7%, much of that gain was on accounting function as the life of some of its manufacturing equipment was increased in the quarter. BYND has $1.1 billion in debt on its balance sheet and a limited cash runway of $258.6 million (down from $310 million at year-end 2022).īeyond Meat’s gross margin turned negative in 2022 compared to its positive gross margins of 25% in 2021 and 30% in 2020. The company also has a substantial amount of debt in its capital structure, which may become a meaningful risk factor in the current high-interest rate environment. Moreover, the company is dealing with low utilization of plants, lower revenue per pound, and termination of co-manufacturing agreements. In the U.S., the company’s distribution has maxed out, while inventory levels remain high. There are a number of headwinds that continue to pressure BYND stock going forward. While we acknowledge that it is not surprising for Beyond Meat to be unprofitable since it is a fairly young company (IPO in May 2019), still in its investing phase, the weak financials in the last few quarters have made investors skeptical about its growth ahead. Compared to its peers, BYND has not yet earned a full-year profit. Beyond Meat’s stock remains under pressure as revenue continues to fall and solvency concerns persist. The company’s stock has declined thanks to the combination of inflation, pandemic-related shifts in demand, and rising competition. BYND stock has dropped from around $24 to $13 over the last twelve months, largely underperforming the broader indices, with the S&P growing about 16% over the same period. After almost a 46% decline over the last twelve months, at the current price of around $13 per share, we believe Beyond Meat stock (NASDAQ: BYND), a plant-based meat alternative – could see more weakness.
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