Is Vipshop a Buy at Its Multiyear Low?

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Shares of Vipshop (NYSE: VIPS) recently tumbled to multiyear lows thanks to concerns about its slowing growth and escalating trade tensions between the US and China. But after that sell-off, Vipshop's stock trades at just 10 times this year's estimated earnings and 0.3 times this year's estimated sales.

Those are incredibly low valuations for a company with double-digit sales growth. Let's take a closer look at how Vipshop lost its mojo, and whether the stock can recover in the near future.

Three women looking at a laptop screen. One of them is holding a credit card.
Three women looking at a laptop screen. One of them is holding a credit card.

Image source: Getty Images.

What does Vipshop do?

Vipshop runs a B2C (business-to-consumer) marketplace that sells apparel, accessories, and other products through ongoing flash sales. It has a first-mover's advantage but controls only about 2% of China's e-commerce market, according to eMarketer. That puts its in a distant fifth place behind Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), JD.com (NASDAQ: JD), Pinduoduo, and Suning, in that order.

JD.com and Tencent (NASDAQOTH: TCEHY) co-invested $863 million in Vipshop last year to counter Alibaba. That investment gave Tencent a 7% stake, and boosted JD's existing stake from 2.5% to 5.5%. Vipshop subsequently launched about 400 million "mini programs" (in-app stores) on Tencent's WeChat, the top messaging app in China. It also bundled VIP membership packages with Tencent Video subscriptions.

How fast is Vipshop growing?

Vipshop was once a high-growth company, but its year-over-year revenue growth has decelerated over the past year.

Metric

Q2 2017

Q3 2017

Q4 2017

Q1 2018

Q2 2018

YOY revenue growth

30.3%

27.6%

27.1%

24.6%

18.4%

YOY = year-over-year. Data source: Vipshop quarterly reports.

Vipshop's growth in number of "active" customers, meaning those who made at least one purchase during the period, also slowed. In the fourth quarter of 2017, Vipshop reported that its active customer number rose 11% annually to 57.8 million for the full year. But in the first quarter of 2018 it stated that its active customer count over the past 12 months grew just 2% annually.

In the second quarter, it quietly swapped the trailing 12 month comparison with a year-over-year comparison. On that basis, its active customer count rose 6% to 29.8 million.

That reporting move raises a red flag. It might initially seem like Vipshop's year-over-year active customer growth accelerated between the first and second quarters, but the two periods used different metrics. Vipshop also didn't report its active customer count on a quarterly basis before, so we can't calculate how many active customers it had on a trailing-12-month basis at the end of the second quarter.