Shares of Coinstar (Nasdaq: CSTR) hit a 52-week high yesterday. Let's look at how it got here and whether clear skies are ahead.

How it got here
Shares have enjoyed a healthy run so far this year, enjoying a gain of roughly 38% year to date.

I even started off the year by calling the stock a buy, primarily on strength in its Redbox division, which is driving all of the growth. Not long after that call (and accompanying CAPScall), the company posted a stellar quarter that blew past analyst estimates. The buck per share in profit trounced the $0.64 per share that the Street was looking for, while revenue similarly came in strong. The company also said it was buying NCR's (NYSE: NCR) DVD kiosk business, taking out its closest competitor.

Around the same time, it also announced that it was hooking up with wireless carrier Verizon to at long last get into online streaming to threaten streaming king Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX), after years of overpromising and nonexistent delivering on those promises.

Last month, Coinstar said Redboxes have now dispensed a cumulative total of 2 billion DVDs since inception.

The big earnings beat has provided the biggest catalyst for the recent run, as shares soared 19% on that day alone. Shares have been coasting higher ever since.

How it stacks up
Let's see how Coinstar stacks up with some of its peers and soon-to-be streaming competitors.

CSTR Chart

CSTR data by YCharts

Let's add some fundamental metrics to the mix.

Company

P/E (TTM)

EPS Growth (5-Yr. Rate)

Net Margin (TTM)

ROE (TTM)

Coinstar 17.3 40.3% 6.2% 23.6%
Netflix 24.4 42.5% 7.0% 48.5%
DISH Network (Nasdaq: DISH) 9.3 20.0% 10.8% N/A

Source: Reuters. TTM = trailing 12 months. Note: DISH has negative shareholders' equity. N/A = not available.

As mentioned above, Coinstar's Redbox now has no meaningful direct competitors in the DVD kiosk business -- its greatest growth market. As it enters streaming, it will be going against Netflix, DISH's Blockbuster, Amazon.com's (Nasdaq: AMZN) Prime Instant Video, and Hulu, among many others.

Amazon is aggressively growing its Prime Video library, but it's also getting in on app sales for its Kindle Fire and other types of digital content.

What's next
Coinstar still looks reasonably valued when you consider its strong growth prospects and return on equity.

There will always be a place in viewers' collective hearts for the instant gratification of picking up a DVD and staying in for the night -- a place that Redbox owns. I think Coinstar still has room to run.

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