Two Years From Now, You'll Wish You Bought eBay (N
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Two Years From Now, You'll Wish You Bought eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY)
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  But  tech guru  Michael A. Robinson   sees this  company  as the tech sector's top possible turnaround play - a transformation he   says that will turn it into a mobile-commerce stock that every investor  will  want to own. 
  
  I'm  talking about Internet auctioneer  eBay  Inc. (Nasdaq:     EBAY     )  . 
  
  Michael  is a recent addition to the  Money Map  Press   team - which means I can now access his insights for   Private  Briefing    .  He's an author and former journalist (like me) who's built  himself  into one of the top tech experts and futurists in the field.  
  
  That's  not hyperbole. His   Radical  Technology Profits      advisory service celebrated its one-month anniversary last week and he  just closed out his first trade with a   132.9% gain.  
  
  The  fact that he notched an options-magnitude profit on a stock ... in  only a month ...  is impressive enough - but to do so against such a  lousy market backdrop makes  this a pretty remarkable trade. 
  
  I've  been spending a lot of time with Michael of late, just chatting to  get to know  him a bit more and to get some ideas for all of you.  Earlier this week, he made  a comment that so intrigued me that it  became a conversation unto itself. 
  
  Let  me share some of that conversation so that you can see how this guy thinks. 
  
  We were  talking about tech-stock profit opportunities when Michael told  me: "You know,  Bill, I wouldn't count eBay out as a big-cap turnaround  play. The company  generates enormous amounts of cash ... something  like $1.3 billion in free-cash  flow (FCF) ... and it has some $3.8  billion in cash on hand with a 19% return on  equity." 
  
  At  the very least, Michael said that eBay shares represent "a more stable,  long-term approach to the market." 
  
  But  there's also an intriguing potential catalyst at work here. 
  
  "While  most investors would view this as a somewhat unexciting company, the fact is  that eBay has strong growth in Europe  because  of   the downturn there.  
  
  "Furthermore,  it just launched  PayPal   as a   point-of-sale (POS) alternative," Michael told me. "Just a small  fraction of  the POS market could be worth several hundred million three  years from today. eBay  is working with  VeriFone Systems Inc.  (NYSE:     PAY     )   on this, uniting eBay withthe  world's largest maker of  credit  -card terminals." 
 
 
 
 
 So what makes eBay a  "turnaround" candidate? 
  
 
   
 
 
  
  Today's  consumer is very different from the consumer of a decade ago -  if for no other  reason than we now have an electronic shopping mall in  the palm of our hands ...  well, in our cellphone, iPad or tablet. 
  
  Last  year, eBay bought GSI Commerce  ,  a leading  provider of e-commerce and interactive marketing services for the   world's premier brands and retailers. Michael said it's involved in at  least $2  billion worth of e-commerce. There's also  X.commerce  ,  eBay's open-commerce platform, which allows merchants of all sizes to grow  their businesses.  
  
  eBay  has been shrewd in terms of the friends it's chosen, having established strategic  partnerships with   craigslist Inc    ., mobile-commerce player  mFoundry  , and  MercadoLibre  Inc. (Nasdaq:     MELI     )  , the leading online action  firm in  Latin America  . 
  
  eBay  also acquired  Bill Me Later   - a play  on easy online payments - to merge with its  PayPal   business. 
  
  Michael  told me that, in terms of transaction volume, PayPal currently  dominates the  firm. Last year alone, PayPal had total transaction  volume (not the same as  sales) of $119 billion, compared with total  merchandise volume of $69 billion  for eBay. 
  
  Like  a chess player focused on victory, eBay continues to make moves  today that investors  will only understand in the future - once that  victory (and a higher stock  price) has been secured. 
  
  And  that focus is global. Just last month, PayPal launched a joint venture with  SOFTBANK Corp. (PINK:     SFTBF     )  , an Internet leader in  Japan.  
  
  They  expect the joint product  PayPal Here   in Japan to  support the growth of 4.7 million small businesses, which account  for  99% of all businesses and 70% of all employment in Japan. 
  
  "The  key takeaway is that eBay is ramping up as a total e-commerce and  mobile-shopping  clearinghouse that will touch brands and outlets all  over the world," Michael  said. "And it runs one of the more active  M&A operations in the tech  industry." 
  
  Now  you can see why  I   like to talk with this guy. If  you   want to  check out more of his research,   click  here  .   
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
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