Walmart investors eye margins amid grocery focus
Reuters
When Walmart reports earnings Thursday, investors will get an even closer look at how American shoppers shifted their spending when faced with higher prices on groceries and most other merchandise.
Shoppers recently have been cutting back on their purchases of clothing, TVs and furniture – goods that tend to be more profitable for Walmart and other retailers. Home improvement chain Home Depot cut its annual forecast on Tuesday, indicating weakness for retailers who sell discretionary merchandise.
Yet many shoppers have turned to Walmart for its low-priced basics such as toilet paper, milk, green beans and eggs. Groceries account for more than half of Walmart revenues.
Walmart seems well-positioned to beat its earnings expectation for the first quarter. Telsey Advisory Group, UBS
“The narrative around Walmart is that not only is it a bastion of safety in this otherwise uncertain world, but it is also a company that is capitalizing on its myriad emerging opportunities as it adapts to a digital landscape,” UBS analyst Michael Lasser said.
Investors such as Charles Sizemore, chief investment officer of Sizemore Capital Management, are looking for any specific hit to Walmart’s so called gross profit margin. This metric, the ratio of gross profit to revenue, was around 24.14% for the year-ended January 31.
“My question would be, for this quarter, if they are seeing any erosion in gross margins and what that looks like,” said Sizemore, whose firm which holds $2.4 million in Walmart shares.
Other potentially telling clues will be whether the average transaction at Walmart is bigger, or smaller, or if there were more transactions overall in the first quarter.
Walmart usually kicks off the retail earnings season and because of its size, it sets the tone for the rest of the industry. This quarter, however, its rival Target reports first, posting results on Wednesday with Walmart on Thursday.
Executives at Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart in February had forecast operating margin between 3.5% to 4% for the first quarter, up from 3.28% for the year ended January 31.
David Klink, senior equity analyst at Huntington Private
Analysts on average are expecting the retailer to post first quarter margins of 3.7%, according to UBS.
U.S. retail sales rose 0.4% in April, the Commerce department reported on Tuesday, suggesting that the economy was experiencing a spring revival after activity slowed in February and March.