Closely held e-cigarette maker Juul Labs and other Silicon Valley
start-ups lately have turned up as side bets in portfolios from
Fidelity and rivals like T. Rowe Price, as the asset managers look
for big paydays once the small companies go public, as Facebook Inc
did in 2012.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave the five top-selling
e-cigarette brands 60 days to provide plans for keeping their
products from being used my minors. Juul, which owns about a 72
percent market share, was targeted by the agency for selling flavors
that appear to particularly appeal to minors.
At Boston-based Fidelity, Juul is held in funds including Blue Chip
Growth Fund and Fidelity Advisor Series Growth Opportunities Fund.
At the latter, a stake in Juul was the largest single holding as of
July 31, with a valuation of $45.8 million, or 6.4 percent of net
assets, according to a current disclosure on the fund firm's
website.
Fidelity spokeswoman Meghan French declined to comment or make
portfolio managers available to comment. But even managers who are
fans of Juul have made clear that uncertainty remains.
"The company (Juul) and the industry face a number of social and
public policy concerns," wrote Sonu Kalra, manager of Fidelity Blue
Chip Growth Fund, in a quarterly document for investors dated June
30.
However, he and others were mostly bullish on Juul. "A small private
investment in Juul Labs also paid off. We saw the value of our
non-benchmark position in this leading e-cigarette maker rise along
with the growing popularity of tobacco-free smoking," wrote Growth
Opportunities manager Kyle Weaver in the fund's annual report dated
Nov. 30, 2017.
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Other non-public companies in the Blue Chip Growth portfolio include
ride-hailing company Uber Technologies Inc and Blue Bottle Coffee
Inc.
Uber's chief executive said earlier this month that the company is
on track to go public next year. But the company also shows the
risks of investing in start-ups not yet tested by public markets, as
it faces regulatory scrutiny over several issues, including alleged
violations of bribery laws and gender discrimination.
Uber has said it is cooperating with a U.S. Justice Department
investigation into possible violations of bribery law. Uber CEO Dara
Khosrowshahi in remarks to employees a year ago promised to change
its culture after his predecessor Travis Kalanick resigned.
John Bonnanzio, editor of the Fidelity Monitor & Insight newsletter
for investors, said that whatever the upside, owning Juul represent
business risks, underscored by the FDA action and the difficulty of
measuring the impact on a company whose shares are not publicly
traded.
Pressure from fund investors could lead Fidelity managers to pull
back and decide "this thing isn't worth the trouble," he said.
(Reporting by Ross Kerber; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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