Kohl’s rises on surprise profit as CEO’s turnaround plan shows effect
Reuters
Kohl’s
The company also maintained its full-year targets even as it posted a bigger-than-expected drop in quarterly comparable store sales.
Kohl’s is benefiting from CEO Tom Kingsbury’s efforts to reduce reliance on margin-sapping discounts to cut inventory and focus on in-demand categories including work wear.
Fitch analyst David Silverman said the quarter was “a step in the right direction for Kohl’s to position 2023 as a year of operating income and cash flow growth.”
Shares of Kohl’s, which lost nearly half their value in 2022, were up about 8% at $20.86 after the company also reported a 67 basis point improvement in quarterly gross margin from a year earlier and a drop in operating expenses.
Earnings per share came in at 13 cents, beating analysts’ average expectation of a loss of 42 cents, according to Refinitiv IBES data.
The company’s inventory also fell 6%, compared to a 4% rise in the prior quarter.
“We made progress against each of our key priorities for 2023 despite continuing to operate in a challenging macroeconomic backdrop … it will take time for the full impact of our efforts to be realized,” Kingsbury said on an analyst call.
For full-year 2023, Kohl’s maintained its forecast for sales and profit.
“The middle-income customer is being squeezed,” Kohl’s Kingsbury said, as the company flagged weaker consumer spending.
Several U.S. retailers are facing slowing demand as inflation-hit customers curb spending on non-essential items. Target
The challenging retail environment drove a 4.3% decline in Kohl’s first-quarter comparable sales, compared with estimates of a 3.9% fall.