Farfetch has not listed any direct competitors in the F-1 filing for direct peer comparison. However, based on our research their competitors are ASOS, Yoox Net-A-Porter Group (acquired by Richemont in June 2018) and Zalando. Their EV/Sales multiple (FY'18) is far below Farfetch’s:
● ASOS: 2.1x
● Yoox Net-A-Porter (latest, FY17): 1.9
● Zalando: 1.8x
It is clear from the valuation perspective that Farfetch is setting the valuation based on other technology platforms such as eBay, Etsy, Spotify, Netflix, Facebook, Twitter et cetera. It seems investor demand is high enough given the tight price range to accept this premise.
For Farfetch to live to those high expectations, the growth decay has be slow over the coming years with the business growing at least +40% on the top line each year to justify the valuation premium to ASOS, Yoox Net-A-Porter, and Zalando. Although the business model is not entirely the same, the question is whether it is so different to warrant such a big gap. Time will obviously tell and our view is that the first couple of earnings releases will be crucial for the stock price.
Risk profile The Farfetch IPO comes with risks for investors. Key investment risks are slower online adoption/penetration than expected as luxury proves to be more a physical experience than online. The company is not profitable, which creates greater credit/equity risks for shareholders and creditors. The luxury fashion industry is highly competitive and fast-changing. which makes it difficult to predict. Farfetch is dependent on luxury sellers wanting to sell their goods on the platform and these sellers likely have the upper hand on the take-fees. GDPR could potentially slow down retail growth as it increases friction for customers.