Skip to Content

Priceline Sell-Off a Good Buying Opportunity

Lower near-term U.S. bookings don’t dent our view of narrow-moat Priceline as a top investment idea, writes Morningstar’s Dan Wasiolek.

Narrow-moat

The firm enjoyed strong constant-currency international bookings (89% of total bookings) growth of 25% (versus 16%-23% guidance) and agency revenue margins (metric measuring international profitability and brand strength) of 18.3% (versus 17.8% the previous year). This drove total revenue growth of 9.4% (versus 1%-8% guidance) and gross profit growth of 12.5% (3%-10% guidance). That said, the fourth-quarter outlook for a decrease in U.S. bookings (11% of total bookings) of 5%-10% represents a meaningful deceleration from the 2.5% decline (versus flat guidance) reported in the third quarter. This stems from the continued weakness of the company’s Name Your Own Price brand, as strong industry hotel occupancy and lower airline fares affect bookings growth but not gross profit.

While the U.S. booking update is disappointing, Priceline reports international and U.S. bookings based on where the brand is located and not where the booking is oriented from. Therefore all transactions through booking.com (whether made from the U.S. or elsewhere) are classified as international, and the company noted they are pleased with the U.S. performance within the booking.com brand. Additionally, U.S. bookings continue to become a smaller piece of the overall business; as a result, Priceline will not provide U.S. bookings metrics beginning in 2016, while continuing to provide revenue and gross profit for the region.

Morningstar Premium Members gain exclusive access to our full Priceline report, including fair value estimates, bull and bear breakdowns, and risk analyses. Not a Premium Member? Get this and other reports immediately when you try Morningstar Premium free for 14 days.

More in Stocks

About the Author

Dan Wasiolek

Senior Equity Analyst
More from Author

Dan Wasiolek is a senior equity analyst for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. He covers gaming, lodging, and online travel.

Before joining Morningstar in 2014, Wasiolek spent 16 years as an analyst and portfolio manager covering U.S. mid- and large-cap strategies for Driehaus Capital Management.

Wasiolek holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Illinois Wesleyan University and a master’s degree in business administration, with a concentration in finance, from the DePaul University Kellstadt School of Business.

Sponsor Center