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Tom Schoewe, Wal-Mart's chief financial officer, told journalists in a conference call that he doesn't remember the last time the U.S. division showed a decline in total sales. Wal-Mart's U.S. division dragged down the company's sales at stores open at least a year. The namesake U.S. division suffered a 2 percent drop in the measurement, while Sam's Club had a 0.7 percent increase. That excludes sales from fuel. Analysts had expected sales at stores opened at least a year to be unchanged from a year ago. Wal-Mart has been able to grab wealthier consumers trading down from higher-priced stores. But the discounter has also seen continued signs of financial strain among its core customers, noticing pronounced swings in spending between paycheck cycles even as the economy has show some improvements. Schoewe told journalists that the company's core consumer continued to be "under pressure." Renovations at its namesake U.S. stores also hurt business because of disruptions. Wal-Mart has been on a campaign to renovate its stores, making sweeping changes like decluttering its aisles and is on a campaign to renovate its stores
The discounter doesn't expect that sales at stores opened at least a year to get much better, estimating that sales at stores open at least a year will be anywhere from down 1 percent to up 1 percent at U.S. Walmart stores. The company stopped reporting sales at stores open at least a year on a monthly basis last year. Wal-Mart also said earnings for the first quarter would be in a range of 81 cents to 85 cents, on the light side of 85 cents expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters. Wal-Mart, which generated a little more than $400 billion in sales in its latest fiscal year, is considered a key barometer of consumer spending, so economists closely monitor sales trends at the discounter that could indicate what kind of economic recovery the nation would face. Consumer spending
-- including such items as health care -- accounts for 70 percent of U.S. economic activity.
[Associated
Press;
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