Investor who’s been right about Nintendo stock predicts what’s next

Josh Kennedy of Sonian Capital bet on Nintendo at just the right time. Back in February, he told Yahoo Finance about his conviction long position on the stock. Just in the past two weeks since the launch of the addictive smartphone game “Pokémon Go,” shares have more than doubled.

When we spoke in February, Kennedy said he expected big things to come in the year ahead.

“They don’t have a mobile offering. They’ve taken steps to address this. They have a wonderful set of assets in terms of the stable of characters, the intellectual property they have. ‘Super Mario,’ ‘Legend of Zelda,’ ‘Pokémon’ … this is a huge advantage for Nintendo in terms of building a mobile audience.”

Nintendo was Sonian’s Capital’s largest position, over 10% of the portfolio, going into the launch of “Pokémon Go.” In a phone interview, Kennedy said his firm is already having the best month since its inception in 2007.

“It has been quite a week or two,” he told Yahoo Finance. “Nintendo was our biggest position, so we have certainly capitalized. Glad we got this right, but have to admit it feels pretty lucky, as well. I never thought ‘Pokémon Go’ would be such a global phenomenon.”

While the firm has trimmed the investment to control the size in the context of the overall portfolio, Kennedy says upside remains.

Nintendo could go even higher

Kennedy pointed to a number of reasons why Nintendo could surge even more.

“It’s hard to make a case for it on earnings right now — it’s going to look expensive on earnings,” Kennedy said. “But key is to look at the deals being done in mobile gaming.”

Activision (ATVI) bought King Digital — primarily for its “Candy Crush” game — for $6 billion in 2015. And Tencent acquired Supercell for $10 billion last month. Meanwhile, Nintendo has a market cap of about $35 billion. Kennedy says the company is really worth at least six times a Supercell purchase, given its strong portfolio.

Kennedy does say that some more upside will come from the “Pokémon Go” franchise itself. For one thing, the game has yet to launch in Japan, where McDonald’s (MCD) will sponsor it. Moreover, in-app purchases — including equipment to catch monsters — will boost earnings per share.

But he does think some of the excitement will wear off, and that there are limitations to how much the game could boost direct earnings per share. That’s because it’s free to play and because Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOGL) each take a cut, along with the game’s creator, Niantic.

But, he added, Nintendo’s success and prospects are reminiscent of what Disney (DIS) has done with Marvel and Pixar characters.