At This Point, Amazon Can Crush a Company Just By Filing for a Trademark
At This Point, Amazon Can Crush a Company Just By Filing
for a Trademark
By Rhett Jones July 17, 2017 11:09pm
Amazon is an unstoppable beast, consuming all industries
that are ripe for disruption and unfortunate enough to cross its path. On
Monday, its latest victim was the struggling food delivery service Blue Apron.
Following Amazon’s bombshell announcement of an agreement
to acquire the Whole Foods grocery chain for $13.7 billion, stock prices for
competitors in the industry have been seesawing for weeks. Kroger, Target,
Wal-Mart, and Costco, have all recently felt the Amazon effect. But no one has
been as hard hit as Blue Apron.
The weekly meal-kit delivery service went public in June,
just days after Amazon’s surprise acquisition announcement. IPOs take a long
time to come together and there’s no way Blue Apron could have anticipated the
move. It initially forecast its IPO range as $15 - $17 a share. In the wake of Amazon’s
announcement, that valuation had to be dropped to $10 a share. It opened and
closed its first day of trading with a flat price.
But Monday was a day of reckoning. The Street first
reported that Amazon Technologies Inc. had filed for a meal-kit trademark that
covers “prepared food kits composed of meat, poultry, fish, seafood, fruit
and/or vegetables . . . ready for cooking and assembly as a meal.” Knowing
which stock to target, traders sent the Blue Apron price tumbling. By 11:19 AM,
it was down 9.4 percent. The ominous figure was $6.66 per share. After hours
trading showed the stock hovering in the same range.
Blue Apron was already trying to break into a tough
business and in its initial prospectus, it said that it had just enough cash
and borrowing capacity for at least one year. Taking a 35 percent hit to its
stock price isn’t going to make anything easier.
Amazon’s price ticked up 1 percent to $1008.11 per share.
The online retail giant is a killer when it comes to
aging industries like selling books. But it still faces stiff competition from
its contemporaries. As recently as December, analysts were signaling that
Netflix should be terrified of Amazon Prime. That could still be the case, but
Netflix posted huge numbers today. After blowing away new subscriber estimates,
the streaming service saw its shares rise by 10 percent in after hours trading.
Bezos may have the supply chains and the willingness to reinvest profits, but
he doesn’t have Orange is the New Black.
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