Better Buy: Activision Blizzard vs. Take-Two Interactive

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Video game stocks have delivered big returns over the last five years, and Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ: ATVI) and Take-Two Interactive (NASDAQ: TTWO) have led the charge. Over that time, Activision shares are up 360%, while Take-Two shares have soared 640%. Those gains put the S&P 500's return of 71% to shame.

Activision is known for its Call of Duty franchise, which typically tops the list of best-sellers every year. Take-Two's flagship franchise is Grand Theft Auto; the latest version that released five years ago has sold 100 million copies.

We'll compare both stocks on valuation, risks, growth expectations, and other metrics to determine which is the better buy for investors today.

Two men sitting on a couch and playing a video game.
Two men sitting on a couch and playing a video game.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Valuation

First, here's how these stocks match up on a range of popular valuation metrics:

Metric

Activision Blizzard

Take-Two Interactive

Trailing P/E

115.1

77.8

Forward P/E

24.9

24.4

P/Sales

7.9

8.0

P/Free cash flow

29.9

52.4

PEG ratio

1.97

1.05

Data source: Y-Charts and Yahoo Finance!

A booming video game industry has gotten investors excited for all the top gaming stocks, which is why there's not a lot of separation between Activision and Take-Two valuation-wise. The trailing price-to-earnings ratio is not meaningful for Activision because of extra tax charges incurred last year as a result of tax reform. Both stocks are even on the basis of the forward P/E ratio and price-to-sales.

Activision is cheaper when comparing its stock price to free cash flow. But analysts are expecting Take-Two to grow faster than Activision over the next five years based on high sales expectations for Red Dead Redemption 2, which gives Take-Two's share price a lower PEG ratio.

Overall, the valuation comparison is a wash.

Winner: Tie.

Business risk and growth prospects

Take-Two's dependence on Grand Theft Auto V makes its shares a riskier proposition, as opposed to Activision, which has eight franchises that have generated at least $1 billion in lifetime revenue. Currently, Activision has four titles -- World of Warcraft, Call of Duty, Overwatch, and Candy Crush -- that generate two-thirds of its annual revenue.

Take-Two expects its Rockstar studio (the maker of Grand Theft Auto and Red Dead Redemption) to make up 55% of non-GAAP revenue in fiscal 2019 (which ends in March). Grand Theft Auto is one of the best-selling franchises of all time, and Red Dead Redemption 2, which releases later this month, is looking like another winner. Analysts expect Take-Two to grow earnings 27% annually over the next five years largely based on expectations that Red Dead Redemption 2 is going to carry the baton for the aging Grand Theft Auto V.