Take-Two Interactive Does More With Less

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Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ: ATVI) and Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: EA) are often credited for their game diversity, and therefore, a lower-risk business profile. Some investors, including me, have perceived Activision and EA to be less risky than Take-Two Interactive (NASDAQ: TTWO) because of the latter's dependency on primarily three franchises -- Grand Theft Auto, NBA 2K, and Red Dead Redemption -- for a significant portion of its annual sales.

However, when comparing the three companies on an important measure of profitability -- return on invested capital (ROIC) -- Take-Two comes out on top. Take-Two's return on invested capital over the last year was 17.82%, and while it oscillates year-to-year, the long-term trend has been up:

TTWO Return on Invested Capital (TTM) Chart
TTWO Return on Invested Capital (TTM) Chart

TTWO Return on Invested Capital (TTM) data by YCharts

Take-Two's steady improvement in ROIC over the last decade raises the question of whether it really is riskier than Activision and EA. After all, it wasn't Take-Two, but Activision and Electronic Arts, that reported weak player engagement trends in the last few quarters. Meanwhile, Take-Two has reported better-than-expected engagement numbers for Grand Theft Auto V -- a five-year-old title -- in addition to strong sales numbers for Red Dead Redemption 2 and NBA 2K19.

Being smaller doesn't mean higher risk

On the surface, Activision and EA seem less risky because each company has made several blockbuster franchises over the years that attract millions of fans all over the world. Before Activision recently sold back the rights of Destiny to game developer Bungie, it was the only game maker that claimed to have eight franchises that had generated at least $1 billion in lifetime sales.

Two young men playing video games while two young women cheer them on.
Two young men playing video games while two young women cheer them on.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Across mobile, PC, and console games, Activision has 345 million monthly active users, while EA has more than 500 million. Take-Two reported last quarter that it had 90 million unique player accounts across Grand Theft Auto and Red Dead Redemption, and NBA 2K19 had sold more than 9 million copies since its September 2018 release.

Take-Two has an impressive number of users given its relative lack of game diversity, but those users are spread over fewer titles, which makes Take-Two seem more vulnerable to competition if players decide to spend more time with other titles on the market.

However, it should be noted that Rockstar Games -- the Take-Two subsidiary that created the Grand Theft Auto and Red Dead franchises -- has gained the reputation of being one of the best and most consistent game development studios in the industry.