National Post

‘Bargain opportunit­y’ at Blue Apron

- Jing Cao

• Blue Apron Holdings Inc. j umped as much as 20 per cent after seven analysts recommende­d investors buy the stock, citing the company’s leadership in the burgeoning meal-kit delivery market.

“We believe Blue Apron is addressing a large multibilli­on- dollar market that is nearly all offline and taking spend away from both traditiona­l grocers and restaurant­s,” said RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Mahaney.

The votes of confidence pushed Blue Apron up to as high as $ 7.86 in New York, marking the biggest intraday increase since the company went public late last month. It closed at $7.41.

That’s well below its IPO price of $10 and five of the 11 analysts who initiated coverage Monday warned that Blue Apron shares shouldn’t be valued at more than that. Some of the analysts were underwrite­rs of the IPO.

New York- based Blue Apron delivers weekly boxes of portioned fresh groceries that correspond with enclosed recipe cards. It’s the largest of dozens of startups that offer similar services and is the first to enter the public market in the U.S. While meal kits don’t even account for one per cent of overall food spending in the U.S., analysts say the market has the potential for fast growth. Being ahead of the pack means Blue Apron is in a good position to take advantage of growing interest in meal kits and add more customers quickly, the analysts said.

There’s significan­t uncertaint­y as to whether meal kits will be anything more than a niche category and that Amazon. com Inc. threatens to overwhelm smaller players in the online food market.

Amazon has shown that it’s serious about getting into fresh food with its bid to buy Whole Foods Market Inc. and its patent applicatio­n for prepared-food kits as well. Blue Apron fell as much as 12 per cent when news of the patent emerged.

“Competitiv­e moves from Amazon and investor concerns around customer retention have put significan­t pressure on the stock both before and after IPO pricing,” said Canaccord Genuity Inc. analyst Michael Graham. “We believe this has created a bargain opportunit­y.”

Blue Apron’s entrance to the public market was overshadow­ed by Amazon’s Whole Foods bid announced just a week earlier, leading the meal-kit company to cut its IPO price by more than a third. Blue Apron had told investors that its product is different from grocery delivery, but Amazon’s trademark meal- kit applicatio­n threatens that argument.

Amazon announced plans in 2015 for a marketplac­e for small- batch artisan- made goods, called Handmade, encroachin­g on a market that Etsy Inc. and EBay Inc. were already leading. The announceme­nt sent Etsy’s shares spiralling. But in the years since, the company has said it hasn’t seen a material impact from Amazon’s marketplac­e, which also hasn’t succeeded in dominating the broader handmade goods category.

 ?? MATTHEW MEAD / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? An example of a home delivered meal from Blue Apron seen in Concord, N.H. Stock in the company jumped as much as 20 per cent Monday on buy recommenda­tions from seven analysts.
MATTHEW MEAD / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES An example of a home delivered meal from Blue Apron seen in Concord, N.H. Stock in the company jumped as much as 20 per cent Monday on buy recommenda­tions from seven analysts.

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