Penn National will nosedive 57% as weak fundamentals overshadow 'internet meme' rally, Deutsche Bank says
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Ben Winck
Oct 1, 2020, 22:52 IST
Getty Images / Cliff Hawkins
An influx of retail-investor interest in Penn National Gaming boosted shares too far, too fast, Deutsche Bank said Thursday.
The bank's analysts lifted their price target for Penn National Gaming shares on Thursday to $31 from $22, implying a 57% plunge over the next 12 months.
While Penn National's improvements to operating costs show promise, the stock has transformed "into an internet meme of sorts" without the fundamentals to support its rally, the analysts said.
Few states are interested in passing online gambling legislation, and the company's total addressable market is smaller than bullish investors realize, they added.
Analysts Carlo Santarelli and Steven Pizzella raised their price target to $31 from $22 on Thursday, implying shares will tumble 57% over the next 12 months from Wednesday's close. The bank reiterated its "sell" rating for Penn National and cited improved operating costs for the target bump.
The casino and sports-betting company's surge was fueled by retail investors who turned the stock "into an internet meme of sorts," the team wrote in a note to clients. Penn National's partnership with Barstool Sports garnered interest from casual investors earlier in the year, but the recent influx of inexperienced day-traders drove extraordinary momentum.
Barstool founder and day-trading streamer Dave Portnoy frequently backed the stock to his millions of online followers, further fueling the summer frenzy.
Institutional investors quickly followed the retail crowd and drove shares even higher. Yet the analysts find little reason for Penn National's stock to rest at such a lofty valuation. There has been little to no progress in passing laws that advance the online gambling sector, and little proof that the sector's total addressable market has expanded, the team wrote.
"We believe the fundamental and valuation support under PENN is lacking," they said, adding "we would anticipate a considerable contraction in shares."
The bearish outlook did little to scare off Penn National investors. The company's shares climbed as much as 3% on Thursday.
Deutsche Bank acknowledged it's not sure when the stock's surge will end, but laid out a few factors that could bring prices closer to its target. For one, the analysts expect the optimistic story around sports betting's total market to "crack" as more data emerges. Competition in the sector will also curb Penn National's profit growth, and investors will soon realize "very few states at present are even considering" legislation for online gambling, they added.
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