"Spruce Point believes Dollarama is a 'strong sell' with an
approximately 40 percent downside risk," Ben Axler, who runs the
hedge fund, said at an investment conference on Tuesday,
according to a person familiar with his presentation. He
examined the company's products, pricing and what he called
"troublesome management and governance red flags."
Axler presented the idea at the Robin Hood Investors Conference
in New York and is expected to release a report detailing the
company's problems on Wednesday.
Axler is one of a handful of so-called short activists,
investment managers who often spend months researching a company
and then publicize the information to convince others that the
stock will fall a lot. Dollarama's stock price has already
dropped 21 percent in the last six months.
Dollarama is no longer a true dollar store after a series of
price hikes that have taken a bite out of store traffic, Axler
said.
Lyla Radmanovich, a Dollarama spokeswoman, said she was not
aware of the presentation and declined to comment on
"speculation regarding our stock price."
Axler also pointed to what he called "questionable accounting
practices" noting that the company made money through its
currency hedges over the last years because sales are in
Canadian dollars while most purchases are linked to the U.S.
dollar. Those benefits have been erased, he said, but
"management reports that gross margins have effectively remained
flat through this period."
More competition, higher labor costs, rising transportation
costs and the lapsing currency hedge benefit could all chip away
at the company's profitability, he predicted.
Axler's brand of short activism has found favor with investors
recently as his fund, which invests $169 million, returned 18
percent after fees so far this year, according to an investor
note.
For funds that pursue this type of research-heavy shorting
strategy, Axler said, recent market volatility is a plus.
"Investors are looking for differentiated research especially
and they are now searching for uncorrelated investments."
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)
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