Why Does Warren Buffett See Opportunity in This Highly Valued Pizza Giant?

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Ninety-four-year old Warren Buffett is still investing, but the biggest news he’s made this year has actually been his massive stock sales and the rising cash pile at his conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B).

But Berkshire hasn’t only been selling stocks; it’s been buying some too, even if the buys have been in more modest amounts.

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In its recent 13-F filing, Berkshire disclosed a new $550 million stake in Domino’s Pizza (NYSE: DPZ) bought in the third quarter. It’s an interesting buy, as the pizza chain’s shares appear more expensive than the typical Buffett stock.

But that’s only at first glance. Here’s the Buffett-esque case for buying Domino’s now.

At first glance, Domino’s looks too expensive to be a Buffett pick, at 28 times earnings. That being said, the purchase was likely made at somewhat lower levels, with Domino’s valuation bottoming out at just under 25 times earnings during the summer.

That’s still higher than the typical P/E ratio at which Buffett buys a stock. And while the purchase could have been initiated by one of Buffett’s two younger investment managers, Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, both “Todd and Ted” also share Buffett’s strict value investing discipline.

Image source: Getty Images.

Even though Domino’s valuation seems high, its asset-light business model has allowed the stock to sustain a high-looking valuation for years.

You see, Domino’s has a highly franchised business model. In fact, 98.6% of Domino’s restaurants are franchises. In that type of model, Domino’s takes franchise fees and a small margin selling pizza ingredients and equipment to franchisees. In addition, Domino’s outsources all international development to large master franchisees, who manage entire or large parts of overseas markets.

Because franchise fees are tied to revenues, not profits, and franchisees need to consistently buy supplies, there is very little “risk” in Domino’s earnings stream compared with other companies that bear 100% of their overhead costs.

That’s why Domino’s and other franchise-heavy restaurant businesses tend to trade at high P/E ratios. So while Domino’s stock fell to “only” 25 times earnings, that was actually close to a decade-low valuation for the stock:

DPZ PE Ratio Chart
DPZ PE Ratio data by YCharts

The Berkshire buy likely came after Domino’s second-quarter earnings release, after which the stock fell about 20% to levels more than 25% below its 52-week high. With the stock down that much and at a historical trough valuation, Buffett or his managers likely smelled opportunity.

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