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Originally Posted by WSSix
This is what happened to Whole Foods. You can even pull up the chart and see the very day this occurred. I feel it's a result of the traders not liking what they saw versus a fundamental change in the business. I'm confident that they will rebound and learn to better compete against the new companies that are slowly expanding and becoming more of a competitor to them. I'm in this for the long haul so I'm not worried. Now, if they don't turn it around and continue to lose out, I'll reevaluate my position. For now though, I'll hold tight and see.
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Tough call there Trey! Whole Foods (WFM) is in a very competitive space and margins for grocery stores are tighter than a frogs ass (water tight!). I think what is happening with this phenomena is that the other markets are waking up to the concept of better quality and organic... and then the margins WFM was able to make are going to be squeezed. At the end of the day -- while consumers will win -- the market only wants to see profits and growth.
My wife shops there... but I won't because I feel like I'm paying way too much when I shell out $300 for 3 bags of food.... and I'm just not the fussy and don't care about "organic" or not. That's a personal issue for sure.... but I think you have to have a pretty healthy budget (is that an oxymoron?) to shop there. This was a stock I owned early on -- but sold when I realized that I wasn't shopping there because of the above and thought -- WTF!?! If I feel that way - maybe others do to!
I still LOVE their stores! Clean - great vegetables - nice displays... but I also have to understand "Wall Street" and what it is they reward, or not.
In this case -- WALL STREET can get it real wrong -- and a great buying opportunity can present itself when others fear and doubt cause selling --- and then the company (any company) comes roaring back and proves the street wrong! I hope for your sake this is the case at WFM. The honeymoon period ended and now they have to show they can maintain sales growth and margins.
We're not trying to discuss the individual merits of each and every investment - but I felt this is worth discussing for 102 because it involves EXPECTATIONS and What the Street wants -- vs -- what we'd like because we like a particular company.
Now -- this is also called a "reset" on The Street.... where expectations are reset. This is where P/E comes into play... a metric that I typically discount because it doesn't mean much a lot of times -------- and then just as you say that ---- it does mean a lot. People will pay it forward (raising the P/E) when they think the growth is there... and then the shares becoming a shrinking violet when this doesn't prove out and growth slows or stalls. THEN the P/E becomes real important because now it's too high!
Part of becoming a savvy investor is to have some patience in these cases. No need to go running in to catch a falling knife at the first price drop (trying to average down etc). Sometimes a guy can just sit back and watch and wait - keeping a sharper eye on the ball and then try to be ahead of the game either dumping the shares or buying more at better prices just ahead of the nice upside surprise. The problem with that kind of investing is it takes TIME - and it takes some kind of inside track to the industry as a whole - and the economy - etc. Unless you have plenty of extra money - then that's usually just not worth the extra effort. Sometimes it's just time to hold and hope -- or sell and move on to a better investment that doesn't have to deal with the issue. This is when it becomes tough to be an investor. The age old "what to do"?