Driving from Vermont to New York City for the seventh annual Value Investing Congress this week, I realized just how far off the beaten path we are in the rural Green Mountains. The six-hour drive was a bit longer than expected, thanks to the more frequent stops that are required when traveling with a small child. This was the first time I've traveled to the Big Apple since our son was born in mid-2010.While I often feel that I'm best positioned to evaluate the financial markets and individual stocks from the quiet comfort of our Vermont office, every once in a while I need a dose of new ideas from like-minded investors. The first day at the Value Investing Congress was exactly what I needed. In this market, stock prices have been incredibly volatile. My economic outlook and investment approach has become more cautious in the last six months. As a result, I've been favoring value-oriented investments in this time of increased uncertainty due to the possibility for slower economic growth in the U.S. and rising European sovereign debt concerns.Little did I know that I would drive 300 miles to attend a hedge fund investor conference to hear a presentation slamming a company located just 30 miles from my home in Vermont. The best presentation of the first day, on Monday, came from David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital. Einhorn started his hedge fund in 1996 with less than $1 million in assets, and has grown his funds to over $8 billion today.Value investors around the world know Einhorn for his book titled "Fooling Some of the People All of the Time" and his famous call to "short-sell" Lehman Brothers back in 2007 (a recommendation that he first shared at the Value Investing Congress). At last year's New York City Congress event, Einhorn revealed his "short" interest in The St. Joe Company (NYSE: JOE). He's since battled publicly with Bruce Berkowitz of The Fairholme Fund (FAIRX), who has taken over St. Joe Co. as chairman. (JOE shares have since dropped 21 percent in the last year).Einhorn's 110-slide presentation to the room of value investors - that included hedge fund managers, mutual fund managers, large private investors, and lowly investment newsletter editors - was titled "GAAP-uccino," and revealed his bearish case for shares of Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (Nasdaq: GMCR).It's no surprise that Green Mountain Coffee is attracting the interest of short-sellers. After all, shares of the maker of the Keurig coffee machines and K-Cup single-serve coffee were up 172 percent year-to-date in 2011 (before Einhorn's presentation). That alone is enough to get short-sellers excited.But Einhorn didn't build his successful hedge fund simply by short-selling stocks that have risen dramatically in price. And his research into Green Mountain Coffee appears to be exhaustive - including "channel checks" and numerous interviews with current and former employees at Green Mountain Coffee and its partners.Green Mountain Coffee has been a darling among growth investors who see the rapid top-line revenue growth as an indication of a future gravy train of profits. The company has evolved from a small coffee roasting company into a maker of single serve coffee machines.The company's business model has evolved and today resembles that of the "razors and razorblades" model used by the likes of Gillette. This means that Green Mountain is selling coffee machines at or near its cost (essentially making little or no profit), while getting consumers hooked on its single serve K-Cup product. As a result, all that really matters for Green Mountain is how successful the company is at penetrating the market and then selling K-Cups (the "razors") to customers.Einhorn's research indicates that Green Mountain Coffee has already achieved significant market penetration and that the addressable market may be smaller than forecast by the company and bullish analysts. Currently, K-Cups sell for around $0.85 apiece. They're a bargain compared with a latte from Starbucks, but expensive relative to making a pot in your Mr. Coffee Machine. The Keurig machines are similarly expensive, making them an unaffordable coffee brewing option for many consumers. Einhorn suggests that the affluent early adopters have already purchased their machines, and that growth of the market is smaller than expected.Similarly, Einhorn believes that the number of K-Cups sold per Keurig machine (known as "attachment rate") is actually declining. The reason for this is that early adopters of single serve coffee are the biggest coffee drinkers, and new buyers are consuming less.However, it's been hard for investors to get a complete understanding of the falling attachment rate, since Green Mountain management has changed its disclosure policy and is no longer providing this information to investors.Einhorn is publicly critical of Green Mountain's management team for regularly changing its disclosure in quarterly S.E.C. filings, an effort that he believes is designed to mislead investors and make it difficult to analyze the stock. In spite of these concerns, investors have embraced GMCR shares. Big deals with Dunkin' Donuts (Nasdaq: DNKN), Smuckers and Starbucks (Nasdaq: SBUX) sent Green Mountain shares soaring. However, Einhorn points out that the deals with Starbucks and others are not exclusive. Add on the fact that Green Mountain's patent on K-Cups expires in September 2012, and he believes that some partners and other competitors will begin making K-Cups for use in the Keurig (less than one year from now, they will be allowed to do so). The introduction of new single serve cups that could be used with Green Mountain's Keurig will hurt profit margins for the company, as the company's "virtual monopoly" will come to an end.Today Green Mountain earns a profit of about $0.15 per K-Cup sold. However, data from its partnership with Smuckers indicates that on sales of these K-Cups for which Green Mountain licenses the Smuckers brand, the profit per K-Cup is around $0.06 - $0.07. With Green Mountain reporting that the Starbucks relationship is similar, investors should be expecting falling profit margins in the future.Perhaps the most concerning part of Einhorn's presentation was the feedback he had received from current and former employees at Green Mountain Coffee and its distribution partners. It seems that numerous people who have worked with the company have reported that Green Mountain Coffee uses shipping and transport of both Keurig machines and K-Cups between facilities in order to book revenues in an attempt to meet or beat quarterly financial estimates. Such efforts are considered fraudulent, since the only reason to perform these activities would be to inflate earnings and intentionally mislead investors.The growth-oriented company also appears to be playing it fast and loose with its financial performance, as highlighted by a recent S.E.C. inquiry and Green Mountain Coffee's public admission that its accounting systems and processes were not sufficient. The actions of company insiders are similarly concerning. Thus far in 2011, company "insiders" who are "in the know" have been selling massive amounts of stock. Year-to-date insider sales total an impressive $172 million of stock, allowing management to personally cash in on the rise of GMCR shares.When will the company's growth come to an end? It's hard to say. Green Mountain has been investing heavily in its growth, so much so that the company has had negative cash flow for years. Meanwhile, their capital spending in 2011 is expected to equal 130 percent of net income, and is slated to rise to 200 percent of net income in 2012.It's unclear where the S.E.C. investigation into Green Mountain Coffee will lead next. But Einhorn presented a compelling case for staying far away from this growth stock darling. In fact, his recommendation to the Value Investing Congress was clearly to "sell short" GMCR shares. Given the stock's 10 percent drop yesterday, it appears that many conference attendees (myself included) agreed with the analysis.Before Einhorn's presentation, shares of Green Mountain Coffee were trading at 55-times estimated 2011 EPS and 35 times estimated 2012 EPS. Thus far, most investors have accepted those as fair multiples for this high growth stock.The risk to short-sellers with a stock like GMCR is that the revenue and EPS growth can continue for a long period of time, which can result in a rising share price. That certainly could be the case with Green Mountain Coffee - one of the best performing stocks over the last decade and in 2011. Caution is advised, and short-selling is not for the risk-averse.However, if Einhorn is correct about even part of his investment thesis presented on Monday, it could spell trouble for GMCR shares. And any one of these issues could send the earnings multiple for the stock crashing. It appears that there are many potential risks facing GMCR - and its stock - these days.First there is the market penetration and "attachment rate" issue. Second, there is the patent expiration in just 11 months that could crush profit margins. Third, there are shrinking profit margins from "partnerships" with the likes of Starbucks. Fourth, there is an alleged intentional lack of disclosure from management about the performance of the business. Fifth, there is substantial insider selling. And sixth, there are claims of fraudulent shipping in an attempt to book revenues and profits.On top of all that, it's possible that the S.E.C. could step up its investigation into GMCR's accounting practices at any moment. Put simply, the risks involved with this stock are very real. And so I personally initiated a "short" position in shares of GMCR yesterday afternoon at $81.13 after hearing Einhorn's presentation first hand.
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