Microsoft Deal Re-Writes Barnes & Noble’s Story: Analysts
Microsoft’s $300 million investment in Barnes & Noble’s“Nook” digital-book business not only lit up the bookseller’s share price on Monday, but it fundamentally changed its ability to compete, analysts said.
“This is the story of Barnes & Noble going from a little bookseller to a major player,” Maxim Group analyst John Tinker told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.”
“The book business is actually quite profitable and obviously benefited from Borders going out of business,” he said. “Now they really are the only national bookseller in the game.”
While “still reviewing” his formal stock price target, Tinker is leaning toward $27 per share. The stock closed trading at $20.75 on Monday.
In the same interview, Morningstar analyst Peter Wahlstrom said he is also bullish on the stock following Monday’s news.
“The landscape has changed,” said Wahlstrom. “The strategicprovides increased distribution domestically and internationally, which I think is going to be a big push for Barnes & Noble.”
Revenue sharing from Microsoft will enable the bookseller to get its digital strategy “trending towards profitability,” he said.
Without the funding, Wahlstrom says, Barnes & Noble would have faced an “uphill battle” getting the Nook to compete with Amazon.com’s Kindle as well as Apple’s iPad.
Maxim Group’s Tinker agreed, saying Barnes & Noble now will have the chance to boost its digital and brick-and-mortar business.
“Everyone’s trying to figure out how to make a brick-and-mortar and digital strategy go together,” he said. “You can’t just go digital today.”
Additional Views: How Microsoft Is Scaring Apple
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Disclosures:
Neither Peter Wahlstrom nor John Tinker personally own shares of BKS.
Disclaimer
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Follow Jennifer Leigh Parker on Twitter @jparker741.