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It's Time to Get Greedy With JD.Com Inc (ADR) Stock

Six years ago, I wrote about a company I called "my highest-conviction stock in the market." That stock was Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), and since then, it has octupled -- returning 700% for investors. My reasoning was fairly simple:

Having streamlined, super-expensive [fulfillment] centers spread throughout the country ensures that when you order something from Amazon, it will get to you in just a few days ... If I were a bright entrepreneur, I would look for other ways to succeed outside taking on Amazon. The cost would be too high, and the probability of success too low.

I'm starting to see the very same dynamics play out in Chinese e-commerce specialist JD.com (NASDAQ: JD), and it's why I'll be buying more shares of the company when Motley Fool trading rules allow.

A JD delivery drone on a red mat
A JD delivery drone on a red mat

A delivery drone from JD. Image source: JD.com.

Securing the entire delivery chain

Of all the reasons to own shares of JD, none is more important to the company's moat -- and my investment thesis -- than this section of the company's annual report:

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We operated a total of 486 warehouses...in 78 cities as of December 31, 2017, and our comprehensive fulfillment facilities covered almost all counties and districts across China as of the same date. We delivery a majority of the orders directly to customers.

This is a huge deal. Unlike a company relying solely on a network effect, which can switch from a virtuous to a vicious cycle one when it falls out a favor, or a brand whose value is often out of management's control, JD's key advantage is in the form of physical locations -- to a scale that is completely unmatched in the Middle Kingdom.

The real moat here is low-cost production: Because of its fulfillment network, JD can offer next- or two-day delivery for lower internal costs than anyone else. Not only does that engender customer loyalty, but it also helps guard against counterfeit goods -- a problem that is rife in China.

The biggest rivals aren't major threats to narrow this moat right now. Alibaba enjoys wide margins precisely because it does not have to worry about building and maintaining huge delivery networks -- though it is making moves in that direction. And Tencent -- the $500 billion social media and gaming giant -- has a history of working as partners with JD.

And JD is taking a page right out of the Amazon playbook. Last year, the company reworked its JD Plus premium membership program to include access to free e-books, special rebates, and...you guessed it...free shipping. It also recently threw in a premium membership to streaming giant iQiyi recently to sweeten the JD Plus benefits for members.

While we don't have specific numbers on membership in JD Plus, there's little reason to doubt that the benefits of the membership will continue to accrue, and could attract very sticky revenue over the long run.

The results are proving this out

Of course, there's nothing exciting about an impenetrable moat of fulfillment networks if nobody is actually buying anything on JD. That, however, is not a major problem for the company. Revenue, gross merchandise value -- or GMV, a measure of everything sold on the site, and annual active customers have all been growing at very healthy clips.

Metric

2015

2016

2017

TTM

CAGR

Revenue

181 billion RMB

258 billion RMB

362 billion RMB

387 billion RMB

40%

GMV

591 billion RMB

939 billion RMB

1,295 billion RMB

1,372 billion RMB

45%

Customers

155 million

227 million

293 million

302 million

35%

Data source: SEC filings. TTM = Trailing 12 months. CAGR = Compounded annual growth rate.

To put these numbers in perspective, the company's revenue over the past 12 months is equivalent to $60 billion, while GMV clocks in at $213 billion.

After dipping slightly in 2016, the amount of revenue per active customer has increased 13% since. And the amount of merchandise purchased per customer has increased almost 20% since 2015. In other words, JD is not only gaining more customers, but each customer is buying more from the platform -- and generating more revenue -- over time.

All of these forces combine to give JD four different moats, of varying strength:

  • Low-cost production: This is the strongest moat and comes from the aforementioned fulfillment network.

  • High switching costs: Because of JD Plus and the ancillary services associated with it, the company's membership program could gain moderately high switching costs, as no one in China can offer the same shipping deals as JD.

  • Network effect: With an established fulfillment network, JD established a separate entity in April 2017 -- JD Logistics. As more people flock to JD's site, third-party vendors are incentivized to list on JD and use JD Logistics for fulfillment. This draws even more Chinese customers to the platform -- creating a virtuous cycle.

  • Brand: Because of the three aforementioned forces, Statista says the JD brand is worth over $14 billion -- the 12th-most valuable in China.

A price to justify being greedy

Any student of Amazon stock history realizes a tension: The stock has never been "cheap" by traditional metrics. And yet, waiting for a good price has meant passing up incredible gains along the way.

On the face of it, JD appears to be pretty expensive, too. After changing the results into dollars, the company's non-GAAP P/E currently stands at 87 and the price-to-free-cash-flow sits at over 120. That's very expensive.

But JD is also aggressively investing in its future -- whether through improved logistics and fulfillment, or ancillary services. We got a peek into what might be possible when the company took its foot off of the spending pedal last year, when annual free cash flow peaked at $4.8 billion. Today's stock trades at a mere 13 times that figure -- a very cheap price tag relative to the company's growth.

And Alphabet -- parent company of Google -- also recognizes the tremendous opportunity here. The company announced this week that it was investing $550 million in JD. It's a win-win for both companies, as JD gets exposure to a world-leader in data and AI, while Alphabet can reestablish a presence in the Middle Kingdom after abandoning its search ambitions due to government restrictions.

Of course -- as with Amazon -- there's no telling if or when that free cash flow will balloon once again. But I'm putting my skin in the game so that I'll be owning shares when that does happen. If you're a growth investor with a long-term horizon, I suggest you consider doing the same.

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John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Brian Stoffel owns shares of Amazon, JD.com, and Tencent Holdings. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Amazon, JD.com, and Tencent Holdings. The Motley Fool recommends iQiyi. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.