Best
Buy profit beats estimates on higher-margin TV sales
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[March 03, 2015]
(Reuters) - Best Buy Co Inc
<BBY.N>, the largest U.S. consumer electronics chain, reported a
better-than-expected quarterly profit, helped by improved sales of
higher-margin products such as large-screen TVs and mobile phones during
the holiday shopping season.
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The company's shares rose 4.6 percent at $40.40 in premarket
trading, after Best Buy said it would buy back $1 billion of shares
over the next three years.
Best Buy's total same-store sales increased 2 percent during the
fourth quarter, slightly better than the 1.9 percent rise estimated
by analysts polled by research firm Consensus Metrix.
U.S. same-store sales rose 2.8 percent — the second straight quarter
of growth after three quarters of decline.
Net income attributable to Best Buy shareholders jumped to $519
million, or $1.46 per share, in the quarter ended Jan. 31 from $293
million, or 83 cents per share, a year earlier.
Excluding items, the company earned $1.48 per share from continuing
operations.
Total revenue rose about 1 percent to $14.21 billion.
Analysts on average had expected a profit of $1.35 per share on
revenue of $14.35 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Results in the quarter exclude Best Buy's China business, which the
company said in December it would sell to real estate firm Zhejiang
Jiayuan Group in order to focus on its North American operations.
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The company said it completed the sale of the business on Feb. 13.
Best Buy announced a special dividend of about $180 million, or 51
cents per share, related to proceeds from settlements of a lawsuit
on price fixing of TFT-LCD panels.
(Reporting by Sruthi Ramakrishnan in Bengaluru; Editing by Joyjeet
Das)
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