Earnings

Best Buy says softer demand is sticking around, but company isn’t planning for a recession

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Customers shop at a Best Buy store on August 24, 2021 in Chicago, Illinois. Best Buy reported an increase in second-quarter sales of nearly 20% as consumers purchased electronics to adjust to lifestyle changes related to the ongoing pandemic.
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Best Buy reported lower sales in the fiscal first-quarter, and the retailer lowered its outlook for the year, citing softer demand that doesn’t appear to be letting up.

“That trend has continued into the beginning of Q2 and it does not appear that it will abate in the near-term,” Best Buy CEO Corie Barry said on an analyst call Tuesday.

The economic landscape has worsened since the company provided guidance at an investor day. But while Best Buy is factoring that into its outlook, Barry said the company isn’t “planning for a full recession.”

Even as consumers watch their budgets, she said, Best Buy is selling merchandise that has become more central to their lives. Sales in the company’s fiscal first quarter didn’t decline as sharply as Wall Street had expected.

Consumer electronics over time is a stable industry,” Barry said. “The last two years have clearly underscored the importance of tech in people’s lives, so I think it’s important for us to have that as a backdrop.”

Shares were up less than 1% after rising about 9% before the market opened.

Here’s how the retailer did in the three-month period ended April 30 compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, according to a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:

  • Earnings per share: $1.57 adjusted vs. $1.61 expected
  • Revenue: $10.65 billion vs. $10.41 billion expected

Best Buy said it now anticipates full-year revenue ranging between $48.3 billion to $49.9 billion, compared with a prior outlook of $49.3 billion to $50.8 billion. It said same-store sales will decline between 3% and 6%, a bigger drop than the 1% to 4% decrease that it previously anticipated. It expects adjusted earnings per share in a range of $8.40 to $9.00, compared with the prior outlook of $8.85 to $9.15.

Best Buy’s first-quarter net income fell to $341 million, or $1.49 per share, down from $595 million, or $2.32 per share, a year earlier. Excluding items, it earned an adjusted $1.61 per share.

Net sales decreased to $10.41 billion from $11.64 billion a year earlier.

Same-store sales for Best Buy declined by 8% versus the year-ago period, a better performance than the 8.6% drop that analysts expected, according to FactSet.

Investors have scoured retailers’ earnings for signs about the health of the American consumer with soaring inflation. With Best Buy, some worried the company would be particularly vulnerable. It faced tough comparisons against a year-ago quarter of pandemic-fueled demand for home theaters, computer monitors and kitchen appliances. That caused same-store sales to jump by 37.3%.

Best Buy also told Wall Street at an investor day in March that sales would be softer after two years of very elevated demand. However, Chief Financial Officer Matt Bilunas said the company ultimately anticipated demand above pre-pandemic sales over the next several years.

Walmart and Target‘s heightened investors’ concerns last week. Both big-box retailers reported sales growth in the fiscal first quarter, but missed Wall Street’s earnings expectations as fuel and freight costs spiked and consumers’ demand for higher margin, discretionary purchases sank. In particular, Target CEO Brian Cornell said customers skipped over bulky items like TVs and kitchen appliances — merchandise that Best Buy also sells.

The retailers’ results helped lead to a major sell-off on Wall Street last week, which dragged Best Buy’s stock to a 52-week low on Friday.

Those tempered expectations likely set the stage for Wall Street’s positive reaction to Best Buy on Tuesday morning, even as the retailer cut its forecast and warned of tougher times ahead.

On Monday, shares rose less than 1% to close at $72.59. The company’s stock is down about 29% so far this year and are underperforming the S&P 500’s year-to-date decline of about 17%.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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