Can Lightspeed POS Stock Double Your Money?

Lightspeed POS sock could double investors’ capital over the next 3 years. It can do much more.

| More on:
Question marks in a pile

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s premium investing services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn moresdf

Growth-oriented investors in Lightspeed POS (TSX:LSPD)(NYSE:LSPD) stock may double their money over the next few years. The Canadian tech firm’s quick business transformation over the past nine months has primed it for strong market share growth in core segments. The company has expanded product offerings tap into new growth frontiers and Lightspeed POS’s stock price could rise as the business exponentially grows over the next two to three years.

Lightspeed POS core business is growing

Lightspeed POS marketed its initial public offering (IPO) to stock investors last year. Its core business offerings involved cloud-based omnichannel point-of-sale offerings for small and medium-sized retailers and restaurants, with some e-commerce integration for retail outlets.

Management estimated the company’s total addressable market at about $113 billion annually. This number was calculated from an average monthly revenue of $200 per customer. The target market included about 147 million small and medium-sized retail and restaurant outlets.

Fast forward to June 2020 and the Montreal firm’s average revenue per customer has grown to $230 per month. Increased uptake of the company’s innovative e-commerce offerings during COVID-19 pandemic shutdowns propelled average revenue growth.

As the company’s average customer buys more service offerings, so, too, does the size of its addressable market. Given the same 147 million potential customers of 2019, Lightspeed’s TAM has grown by 15% to $130 billion in under 18 months.

Although the company operates in a highly fragmented market with over 190 competitors, it has a much larger market in dollar terms to attack. Most noteworthy, recent equity raises give it more dry powder to pounce on privately run acquisition targets as it tries to consolidate its legacy market (more on this shortly).

That said, I like its new growth verticals better.

An innovative LSPD transformed its business offerings in 2020

The introduction of eCom for Restaurants during the pandemic was a timely solution to a needy segment. The suite enabled traditional restaurants can serve diners in a completely contactless process, giving them a better chance of surviving any second or third waves of the coronavirus lockdowns. Average revenue per customer is growing as existing subscribers buy added essential offerings.

However, this wasn’t the only innovative product offering the company introduced during the year to grow its revenue line. New e-commerce enabling features were added to the menu.

Lightspeed Payments, is a new payment processing platform that rivals PayPal, Square, and Shopify‘s offerings. Launched for U.S. clients in February 2019, the product was a grand entry into a growing multi-trillion global payments industry. The company can leverage on its existing 77,000 plus client outlets to grow its gross payments processing volumes exponentially.

It will enjoy the spoils of an expanding global payments market as the world increasingly embraces e-commerce. Emerging economies — and their vast populations — are embracing e-payments at a rapid pace too.

There’s more. The company introduced Lightspeed Capital in August this year. This is a short-term financing product for existing users of its retail commerce platforms in the U.S. As I see it, the company is increasingly going after Shopify’s business model. This strategy is brilliant, as it allows LSPD to defend its retail point-of-sale market while attacking the market leader in e-commerce platforms, payments processing, and business lending fronts.

Can Lightspeed POS stock double your money?

Analysts expect Lightspeed POS’s revenue line to grow by 32% annually over the next three years. The company’s most recent sales growth rate was in 51% year-over-year range last quarter. Most of this revenue is recurring.

Even more exciting, the tech firm can surpass the above growth rates through acquisitions after recent capital raises. New financings are dilutive, but the company has demonstrated an ability to raise new equity at price-to-sales multiples as high as 20 times. It acquired point-of-sale company Gastrofix in January this year at a price-to-sales multiple below 10 times. The company can grow its business faster than it is diluting shareholders.

Acquisitions aside, a compound annual revenue growth rate of 32% means that the company can organically double its annual revenue run rate within the next 36 months.

Given such high revenue growth rates and high valuation multiples, Lightspeed POS stock can double your money within three short years. Shares could do better if sales growth translates to positive cash flow and profits during the investment period — a very likely scenario.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Brian Paradza has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Tom Gardner owns shares of Shopify and Square. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends PayPal Holdings, Shopify, and Square. The Motley Fool owns shares of Lightspeed POS Inc and recommends the following options: long January 2022 $75 calls on PayPal Holdings.

More on Tech Stocks

A worker uses a double monitor computer screen in an office.
Tech Stocks

Why Shopify Stock Sold Off Last Week

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) sold off heavily last week. A bad earnings release may have been the culprit.

Read more »

Hand arranging wood block stacking as step stair with arrow up.
Tech Stocks

2 Phenomenal Growth Stocks Down 30-60% That Could Rally in the Next Bull Market

Is it time to buy growth stocks? The worst of the interest rate hike and inflation is over, and now…

Read more »

stock market
Tech Stocks

2 Best Tech Stocks to Buy Before the Next Bull Market

Tech stocks such as Roku and Nuvei can help long-term investors generate outsized gains in 2023 and beyond.

Read more »

Wireless technology
Tech Stocks

Tucows Stock Trades Near its 6-Year Low: Is it a Buy?  

Tucows stock fell 63% in the tech stock sell-off and has failed to show any recovery. Is this domain and…

Read more »

Male IT Specialist Holds Laptop and Discusses Work with Female Server Technician. They're Standing in Data Center, Rack Server Cabinet with Cloud Server Icon and Visualization
Tech Stocks

Is Converge Stock a Buy?

A relatively new tech stock could soar higher with the pause in rate hikes, although a resumption of the cycle…

Read more »

online shopping
Tech Stocks

Up by 25%: Is Shopify Stock Finally a Buy in 2023?

The strong rebound in the TSX’s top tech stock remains uncertain. Investors will have to wait before it delivers stellar…

Read more »

Businessman holding AI cloud
Tech Stocks

2 TSX Tech Stocks Innovating Hard in AI

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) stock and another intriguing Canadian gem make good use of AI technologies.

Read more »

worry concern
Tech Stocks

Shopify Stock: Incredible Bargain or Deceptive Trap?

Shopify has quickly shifted from a market darling to something else. Is it a safe buy or risqué bet?

Read more »