According to recent trading, video game companies THQ Inc. and
Take Two Interactive Software, Inc. have a nearly identical market
capitalization value. THQ stock has nearly tripled in the
last three months on word of solid sales of their new games, UFC
Undisputed and Red Faction Guerilla. But do these companies
really deserve similar values in market trading?
Take Two received a $26 cash offer in February 2008 by
competitor Electronic Arts. THQ has never received a public
buyout offer, even when its stock fell below its cash on hand value
in March 2008. One wonders why a company would have any
interest at all in buying out THQ? Unlike Take Two who
directly owns Grand Theft Auto, Bioshock, Max Payne and
Civilization among other names, THQ owns very little significant
intellectual property and relies on outside licenses for their top
line revenue. At the same time, new competitors Warner
Brothers and Disney video game divisions have risen on their own
without the help of older experienced publishers like THQ. In
the ruthlessly hit driven business, many publishers like Midway
Games and Atari have fallen into serious financial trouble despite
their years in existence.
THQ management has led a company with two consecutive years of
negative earnings, including a massive $6.45 loss in the fiscal
year ending in March 2009. THQ thus cut one third of its
employees after its dismal year and 813 million in revenues.
Analysts project the current year will end with 825 million in
revenue. On the other side, Take Two completed a year with
strong earnings and analysts project revenue of 1.13 billion this
year and 1.3 billion next year, when Take Two releases the next
major installment of Grand Theft Auto.
So with around 50% more revenue, how does Take Two manage to be
so cheap? Or rather, how does THQ stock end up being so
expensive? Is it because video game investors are
crazy? Well, in a way, yes. Investors in video game
stocks seem to wait and see whether an anticipated game performs
well and then they altogether run up the price of the stock, as if
they just received FDA approval for the latest addictive piece of
interactive entertainment. In the process, fundamentals of
previous performance of titles are thrown out the window.
In reality, a company like Electronic Arts would likely agree to
buy Take Two at double their current market cap in a heartbeat,
while the same cannot be said for THQ.
Disclosure: short THQI, long TTWO