Investing
How I Made 50% in 6 Months with Care.com
28 April 2020
Today I want to share with you my thought processes when I first initiated a position in Care.com (NYSE: CRCM) on 28 May 2019 – and less than 6 months later on 20 December 2019 – overall at an average cost of $10.07, I sold off all of it at $15.05.
My valuation for care was higher than $15.05; it was about $19 conservatively. But the fact is that care agreed to be bought over by IAC at $15, and the deal is to be closed by the first quarter of 2020.
Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2019/12/20/iac-to-acquire-carecom-in-500-million-deal.html
So I decided to sell off all my stake – which ultimately to be about 27%-30% of my portfolio when I sold it off.
Here’s the flow of events that made me a 50% gain in less than 6 months:
On 28 May 2019, I initiated a small position for care at $14.42.
On 29 May 2015, I made some money by selling care put options to expire 21 June 2019 at a strike price of $12.50 (which did not get exercised).
On 26 June 2019, I bought more of care at $11.39 and sold more care put options to expire on 19 July 2019 (which did not get exercised).
On 25 July 2019, I bought more of care at $10.75 and sold more put options expiring 16 August 2019 (which did not get exercised).
6 August 2019 was the turning moment when care stock price crashed, and I more than doubled my stake at $7.95. At this point, my average cost for care, excluding premiums I got from selling put options becomes $10.07.
On 20 December 2019, when the acquisition was announced, I sold off all my care stake for about 50% return in less than 6 months.
The key lesson to learn here is that:
Learn from your mistakes: I made some mistake some time back with GameStop in trying to buy a so-so company at an extremely cheap price.
They, too was a candidate for sale, but the sale did not go through, and the share price tanked from about $14 to $10.
I sold off almost all of my stake at about $10.
Now with care, I knew when I bought it at $7.95, it was a solid business at a reasonable price – instead of a so-so business at a cheap price – it paid off.
Intrinsic value is vague, buy in batches: I would not have made a good gain on care, if I bought most of my stake initially at $14.42 on 28 May 2019, I have had an average cost for care at $10.07 because I bought in batches.
The more fearful the market, the more I buy.
In fact, I sold off some of my Facebook stock to fund the care stake on 20 December 2019.
In hindsight, it was a great decision – but again, the framework is clear – when the price to value diverged more, buy more of that stock instead of others.
Legal Disclaimer:
Re-ThinkWealth is a personal value investing & options selling blog. By using this Site, you specifically agree that all the information provided is for general information purposes only and is not intended to be a personalized investment or financial advice.
Important: Please read our full disclaimer.
Further Learning or Doing
- Our Telegram Channel – You can get daily updates on stocks, business, economy, and value investing knowledge from us here.
- Our Value Investing Mentorship Program – Individuals looking to learn skills to become better investors can join our effective and exclusive course, taught via one-on-one mentorship, here.
Some of our most popular articles:
What is Value Investing? – An article I wrote for Value Walk describing in summary what exactly is value investing.
The 100+ Most Intelligent Investing Quotes of All Time – I love quotes. Especially quotes by value investors who had been wildly successful at managing their funds. The list is consistently updated.
The Intelligent Investor Summary (Ultimate Guide) – A very popular article from my site that summarizes concepts of value investing from the father of value investing, Benjamin Graham.
Chris’s latest articles:
Re-examining GameStop as a cigar butt stock investing opportunity
Clearly, GameStop management is aiming to reduce reliance on selling video games and pre-owned games by reducing the store counts for this two — while increasing the store counts (as you can see from the chart above) for Collectibles and Technology business (which is currently still at 5.7% and 9.5% of their overall revenue). I think that it is a step in the right direction as even though the collectibles and technology business only accounts for 15.2% of GameStop’s revenue for 2016, it accounted for 36.9% of GameStop’s total […]
Valuation Ratios – The Basics
[…] Not a true cash flow as it excludes CAPEX and working capital. D&A may be added back to net income when calculating cash flows, however, this implicitly assumes that no additional CAPEX is required. A more refined multiple is EV/(EBITDA – CAPEX), though no news source reports this […]
Determining Value: Why Price Is Meaningless, and Multiples are Informative
Investing Lessons [Advanced] Determining Value: Why Price Is Meaningless, and Multiples are Informative Bryan Wang, Re-ThinkWealth Content Expert 23 September 2017 One of the typical responses people give when talking about stocks is..."What's the price?" In the...
10 Mistakes an Investor should Avoid
Investing Lessons [Beginners] 10 Mistakes an Investor should Avoid Benjamin Tan, Content Expert, Re-ThinkWealth 1 September 2017 Every investor has their own investment philosophy and discipline. Each philosophy has its own merit and what is important...
Value Investing And Behavioral Finance
Investing Lessons [Advanced] Value Investing And Behavioral Finance Chris Lee Susanto, Founder and CEO of Re-ThinkWealth 15 July 2017 SUMMARY: Value Investing is inevitably linked to Behavioural Finance Value Investing is a stock methodology practised by many...
Options Selling Strategy – Wk 4 June 2017 [Keryx Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: KERX)]
Options Selling Options Selling Strategy – Wk 4 June 2017 [Keryx Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: KERX)] Chris Lee Susanto, Founder and CEO, Re-ThinkWealth 24 June 2017 SUMMARY: Options are a form of financial derivatives Options selling strategy have...
Options Selling Strategy – Wk 3 June 2017 (GameStop Inc (NYSE: GME)
Options Selling Options Selling Strategy – Wk 3 June 2017 (GameStop Inc (NYSE: GME) Chris Lee Susanto, Founder and CEO, Re-ThinkWealth 16 June 2017 SUMMARY: Options are a form of financial derivatives Options selling strategy have stocks as...
GameStop Corp (NYSE: GME)– A Cigar Butt Investing Play
Top Articles GameStop Corp (NYSE: GME)– A Cigar Butt Investing Play Chris Lee Susanto, Founder and CEO, Re-ThinkWealth 12 May 2017 SUMMARY: GameStop's valuation is at an all-time low Gross profit margins have been doing well Debt management is good I...
UPDATE: Sold Off All My Stocks In Mobile Telesystems (NYSE: MBT) And This Is What I Learnt From It
Summary Mobile Telesystems (NYSE: MBT) is the biggest stock holdings I had for over two years and it is also the first stock that I bought in my life My absolute gain for this stock is about 34.15% A review of the earnings and revenue growth of MBT indicated an...
[Edited] Importance Of Knowing When To Sell Your Stocks Cannot Be Understated
"Knowing when to sell your stocks is as important-- or even more important-- than knowing when to buy them."- Chris Lee Susanto My Experience I have had experiences in buying stocks of good companies that quickly went to two years high price after I bought it earning...
[Edited] Apple Sued Qualcomm. Here Is Why I Bought It.
In February 2017 I initiated a position on Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM)-- a few days after it was sued by Apple-- when stock price plunged 12%-- for receiving unreasonable royalty fees via leveraging on their monopoly in the chip making industry. Apple sued Qualcomm and I...
My 10 Biggest Takeaways from Warren Buffett and Peter Lynch
Who is Warren Buffett? Born 1930, Omaha, Nebraska Started managing funds in 1956 with the formation of the Buffett Partnership (dissolved in 1969). Now chairman and major owner, Berkshire Hathaway Inc $1,000 invested with Buffett in 1956 would be worth $ 25,289,750 as...