Fidelity Slashes the Valuation of Pinterest Stock

Tue Jul 18 2017
Ray Pierce (820 articles)
Fidelity Slashes the Valuation of Pinterest Stock

Fidelity ‘s bets on unicorn companies, the rare private firm or startup that grows in value to at least $ 1 billion, put a dent in the stellar performance of some of the company’s most popular mutual funds during the first half of 2017.

Fidelity has stepped up disclosure of how pre-IPO companies affect mutual fund performance. This week, for example, Boston-based Fidelity Investments showed how content-sharing company Pinterest had an outsize impact on the portfolio performance of its most popular stock fund.

Pre-IPO investments can amplify a fund’s relative performance because they are not included in a comparison benchmark index. And the valuations attached to them by Fidelity and other mutual fund companies have far outpaced the stock market.

Fidelity ‘s $ 114 billion Contrafund disclosed that its small stake in Pinterest shaved 9 basis points off the fund’s relative return versus the S&P 500 Index. Contrafund’s Series E stake in Pinterest was valued at $ 473.3 million in the first quarter. But at the end of May, that value was marked down by 17%, Fidelity disclosures showed.

Fidelity was not available for comment. But Pinterest was tied with TJX as Contrafund’s largest detractor in the second quarter, even though the pre-IPO company accounted for only 0.34% of the fund’s net assets.

Contrafund, which is run by star Fidelity portfolio manager Will Danoff, posted a total second-quarter return of 6.09% in the second quarter, easily beating the 3.09% total return on the S&P 500 Index.

The fund’s year-to-date return of 19.84% is better than 75% of U.S. large-cap growth mutual funds, according to Morningstar data.

Fidelity ‘s valuation of Contrafund’s Series E stake in Pinterest has more than doubled since an initial investment of $ 159.4 million in October 2013, compared to Nasdaq’s 62% rise.

While Pinterest is a relative pipsqueak in the massive Contrafund portfolio, other Fidelity managers have made tech unicorns some of their largest holdings.

At the end of May, ride-hailing company Uber was a top 20 stock in Fidelity ‘s $ 22 billion Blue Chip Growth Fund. The fund’s Series D stake in Uber was valued at $ 251.5 million, or 1.14% of net assets.

Portfolio manager Sonu Kalra’s Uber stake is bigger than his bet on Starbucks Corp ($ 202 million) and Bank of America ($ 157 million).

In the first quarter, Uber was among the fund’s largest detractors, shaving 12 basis points off the fund’s relative return. Only Qualcomm and Lululemon detracted more.

Ray Pierce

Ray Pierce

Ray Pierce is a Senior Market Analyst. He has been covering Asian stock markets for many years.