New Idea ($TUNE) | The Mic Drop Setup with 4x Upside
A 90% drawdown, a recovering audio cycle, and a valuation setup hiding 4x upside. Here’s why Focusrite might not stay forgotten for long.
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The Turnaround Investing Newsletter
Every Friday, I surface one early-stage setup that looks deeply mispriced. These aren’t buy calls, they’re early ideas I come across to save you time and build out my own opportunity list.
I don’t own the stock, and I haven’t completed a full deep dive. This is just a name that stood out as potentially interesting and worth tracking.
This weeks new idea? An audio gear company that collapsed 90% but on the brink of an epic turnaround. They are now getting back to revenue growth, cash flow is already up, and it’s trading like it’s still broken.
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🔦 This Week’s First Look: Focusrite (TUNE.L)
My thesis: Focusrite rode a massive demand surge during COVID that pulled forward future sales. But like many hardware names, after COVID they overbuilt inventory.
That forced mild price cuts and dragged revenue through 2023 and 2024. But now, inventory levels are normalizing, demand is firming, and the stage is set for a new audio refresh cycle on top of steady creator economy growth.
If management can navigate tariffs and hold their edge against rising competition, this could turn into a multi-year snapback with serious upside.
Valuation upside: Assuming very modest growth, decent margins, and a below average multiple I see at least 4x potential upside from current levels through mid 2028.
Here’s what’s coming:
✅ What Focusrite actually does
✅ The case for a demand recovery + valuation reset
✅ What could still break the thesis
Let’s jump in.
🎧What does Focusrite Do
Focusrite is one of those rare companies that does one thing, and does it exceptionally well. As CEO Tim Carroll puts it: “We make audio interfaces, and that’s all we do. And we’re the best in the world at making that happen.”
An audio interface is the core tool that converts real-world sound, like your voice or guitar, into clean, high-quality digital audio. That interface becomes the foundation for everything from a solo podcast to a Grammy-winning album to a live festival mix.
Their best-known line is Scarlett, used by solo creators and small studios. Clarett+ offers higher-end sound for pros. Vocaster is built for podcasters. OctoPre expands inputs for growing setups. And their Red and RedNet gear powers major studios, broadcasts, and live tours.
So, who’s buying all this gear?
There’s actually a fairly broad range. These interfaces end up in the hands of home musicians and producers, podcasters and YouTubers, live event engineers, touring acts, and even professional studios and broadcasters.
Why do they choose Focusrite?
Because at they say “these products just work.” They offer low-noise preamps, intuitive auto-gain and clip-safe features, and come bundled with top-tier software from names like Ableton and Pro Tools. The interfaces are easy to set up, easy to scale, and backed by a reputation that’s trusted across the audio industry.
In a fragmented market full of confusing gear, Focusrite stands out for making high-quality sound feel simple and accessible. They’re the hardware backbone behind a generation of creators and that shows no sign of slowing down.
🔥 Why It’s Interesting
Massive Drawdown
Focusrite is down almost 90% from its 2021 peak. But this isn’t a business that’s collapsed. Revenue is down just 11% from the highs, and free cash flow is off 40%. A deep cut, but nothing close to what the stock price implies.
Strong Return on Capital
Since 2016, they’ve quietly put up world-class returns on capital. 34% median ROIC and 26.5% ROCE. Though it has declined sharply in past years.
New Demand Cycle
Management is guiding for low single-digit revenue growth in FY25 and H1 already came in at +5% YoY. That’s not flashy, but it’s a meaningful shift after a rough 2024 where inventory drag and price cuts weighed on top-line results.
Under the surface, a new demand cycle may already be kicking in. Gear bought during the COVID boom is aging out, and creators are starting to refresh their setups.
And the macro trends support it. U.S. full-time creator jobs have exploded from 200K in 2020 to 1.5M in 2024. Globally, the number of professional creators is expected to hit 50M by 2030, growing 10–20% annually. As the creator economy scales from $191B to $528B, the demand for plug-and-play pro audio gear looks like a tailwind that’s just getting started. Some forecasts even predict it to be a $1T plus industry by 2034.
Deep Value Multiple
It currently trades at just ~4x free cash flow. Compare that to a historical average of 28x and the disconnect becomes hard to ignore. Especially now that FCF margins are already back to normal levels. The “turnaround” may already be complete. The market just hasn’t priced it in.
Inventory Normalization
After a massive post-COVID overbuild, inventory turnover spiked to unsustainable levels. At the peak, inventory days ballooned to 238 (vs. a pre-COVID norm of ~100). That’s now trending down currently at ~193 days. Still elevated, but directionally improving. Price cuts to clear excess stock hit 2024 revenue but that drag should ease through 2025.
Customer Edge
Focusrite isn’t just about ops, it’s a reputation story. Their customer Net Promoter Score sits at 70, and employee NPS at 33. Both strong numbers for a hardware company, reinforcing their brand strength and internal culture. Creators aren’t just buying the gear, they trust and recommend the company to others.
⚠️ Risks & What Still Needs More Research
Tariff Exposure
This is a big risk that needs to be understood. Around 40–50% of revenue comes from the U.S., and a large portion of production still happens in China. Exposing Focusrite to 12–25% tariffs depending on the product line with blended tariffs around 20%.
Management’s been proactive, building U.S. inventory early, raising prices selectively, shifting some production to Malaysia and the U.S., and offloading tariff costs to distributors when possible.
That playbook softened the blow in FY25 when a temporary U.S. tariff pause hit. Margins improved, but that relief could be short-term. If tariffs snap back for all countries, it could pressure both pricing and unit demand.
This isn’t something to gloss over. You have to dig into product-level sourcing, customer routing, and how much pricing power they actually have.
Execution Track Record
This team isn’t new to adversity. They’ve launched seven acquisitions in five years, refreshed key products like Scarlett Gen 4, and defended margins better than many expected. But FY24 still came in weak. Revenue down 11%, with promotions weighing on profitability.
FY25 is showing signs of recovery. H1 revenue is up ~5%, U.S. demand is bouncing back, and channel destocking is easing. It’s a good start, but far from a done deal.
Work needs to be done to understand managements ability to maintain market share in a highly competitive space and navigate tariffs. These are no small tasks so doing the work to have a clear picture of the management you are getting is crucial.
Management Compensation Plan
As with everyone company you need to understand the incentive plan in place. Is it aligned with shareholder interests? Does it promote sustainable and profitable growth? Or line executive pockets even performance is poor?
Competition
Writing this article I have done very little work on their competition in this industry but I know it is fierce. Even if the execute on most things this industry has a lot of players they will need to maintain or gain market share from. They seem to have a good niche carved out but you need to understand this well before you invest.
📉 Valuation
Let’s keep it simple:
Focusrite reported £162.5M in revenue during the TTM. Assuming they grow at 5% per year for the next 3 years, well below industry forecasts of 10-20%. That puts them around £188M in revenue by mid-2028.
I am assuming lower growth as they navigate tariffs and competition but think there is a good possibility they achieve much more growth after 2025.
Apply a 15% free cash flow margin, slightly below their trailing 12-month margin, and you get ~£28.2M in free cash flow.
At a 15x FCF multiple, which is still far under their historical 20–25x range, that implies:
Market Cap: £423M, ~4x from today’s levels
And that’s without assuming a major breakout. Just steady growth, solid margins, and a muted multiple.
If they re-rate toward historical norms or surprise on product-driven growth, this could go a lot higher.
This is the kind of setup that goes from ignored to undeniable fast.
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AI is another risk. Why have an analog - digital interface when you can have digital AI generated from the beginning?
I’m not convinced, lot of competition and innovation, big risk of just becoming irrelevant. I just don’t see the moat, personally. I don’t see particularly strong management team either. Earnings declining year on year, 3 years of revenue decline, at the very least in this scenario you’d hope to see margin protection, but OpEx actually went up on the lower revenue.
I think this business is overvalued. Down 7.49% yesterday alone.