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SOFI Stock’s Sky High Valuation Can’t be Justified by Exciting Growth

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SoFi Technologies (SOFI) is a lending technology platform and consumer financial stock that has significantly outperformed the broader financial sector over the past 12 months. However, despite the impressive growth outlook, I’m pessimistic about this California company. The stock’s valuation is very high, and the high price paid for the expected growth creates a lot of execution risk. It also benefited from a strong macroeconomic environment and sentiment that could change.

Front and center in my bear case is SoFi Technologies’ high valuation. The company’s price-to-earnings ratios are alarmingly high compared to sector averages, suggesting conditions may be overstated. Currently, its non-GAAP P/E (TTM) ratio is 114.4x which is 733.4% higher than the industry average of 13.7x. Even more worrying is its forward P/E ratio of 134.6x, which is 890% higher than the sector average.

These numbers suggest that investors are paying a significant premium for SoFi’s potential future earnings, creating significant execution risk. GAAP P/E ratios tell a similar story. The TTM P/E of 132.5x and Forward P/E of 119.5x are well above sector averages. These assessments indicate very high growth expectations that may be difficult to achieve. Looking at the estimated P/E ratios for the coming years, we see a strong decline from 119.4x in 2024 to 25.3x in 2027.

Earnings growth is expected to average 60% over these years, which is impressive but inferring a price-to-earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratio of 1.99. This is well above the sector average of 1.45. Furthermore, SoFi doesn’t pay a dividend, unlike many of its peers in the financial sector, which makes its price-to-earnings ratio look more expensive. Such lofty valuations leave little room for error and make SoFi vulnerable to market corrections if the company fails to meet such lofty growth expectations.

I’m also bearish because I believe SoFi’s valuation has evolved due to a high-risk environment, which has contributed to the 121% rally over the past 12 months. The US market had one of the strongest years in living memory, with the re-election of Donald Trump providing additional support. The stock’s success has been driven by record revenue and member growth, due in part to a higher interest rate environment and the resumption of student loan payments.

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