Amazon shadow looms large
ahead of retail earnings
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[August 05, 2017]
By Rodrigo Campos
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As old and new
Amazon.com <AMZN.O> competitors gear up to report earnings, investors
are eager to know how they plan to withstand the growth of the No. 1
online retailer.
So far this quarter, Amazon has been brought up in some 130 earnings
calls from S&P 1500 <.SPSUP> components according to a Reuters analysis.
About 50 of those came in the last week alone.
More than 30 companies reporting earnings in the following weeks
mentioned Amazon during their most recent earnings call or were directly
asked about threats or opportunities regarding Amazon's growth.
"Any retailer, whether it's an online retailer or has online presence,
or just brick and mortar, that tells you they’re not concerned about
Amazon, they’re either in denial or lying," said Steven Osinski,
marketing lecturer at the Fowler College of Business at San Diego State
University.
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Beyond retailers like Wal-Mart <WMT.N> and Target <TGT.N>, and following
Amazon's planned acquisition of Whole Foods Market <WFM.O> announced mid
June, expect Amazon to pop up on earnings calls from food producers,
packagers and retailers including SpartanNash <SPTN.O> and Dean Foods
<DF.N>.
Amazon mentions in less-expected earnings calls could also give
investors an idea of where analysts expect the behemoth to strike next.
"It'll be interesting to see (Amazon CEO Jeff) Bezos' next move in terms
of wanting to expand into a certain space," said Daniel Morgan,
portfolio manager at Synovus Trust in Atlanta.
He said apparel as well as pharmaceutical distribution were among the
areas where Amazon has been said to make its next big move.
"They've shown up in places we didn't think they'd have competitive
impact just two years ago."
In a sign of Amazon's widening clout, industry bellwethers like
McDonald's <MCD.N>, 3M <MMM.N> and Johnson & Johnson <JNJ.N> in their
latest earnings calls were asked for the first time about effects of
Amazon on their businesses.
(For a graphic on Amazon's stock growth, see http://bit.ly/2vxWft0)
NOT-SO-GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Consumer discretionary is the S&P 500 sector expected to post the
smallest year-over-year earnings growth this reporting quarter, with a
gain of 3.3 percent. Overall, earnings are seen rising 12 percent from
last year.
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A trader works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
Manhattan, New York City, U.S., December 21, 2016. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly
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Amazon's own results weigh on the sector, as it earned 40 cents per share
instead of the $1.42 analysts had expected. But its 25 percent revenue increase
to $38 billion was seen as a detriment to some competitors and could weigh down
expectations for their quarterly reports.
"Expectations have been pushed down because a lot of the retailers, particularly
the bricks and mortar ones, have had problems - Amazon and other related - so
expectations are pretty low," said Nuveen Asset Management's chief equity
strategist, Bob Doll.
"Amazon obviously has a very powerful model but on the other hand, they're not
going to put every bricks and mortar retailer out of business. These guys aren't
going to sit and let it happen."
However, stocks in the sector approach their earnings at relatively rich
valuations. Including Amazon, which has an earnings multiple above 100,
investors in consumer discretionary stocks are paying more than $19 for every $1
in earnings forecast over the next 12 months. That is near the highest since
2009.
As costly as sector stocks are, Amazon has kept growing faster than most, up
more than 31 percent year to date. Amazon's market cap, near half a trillion
dollars, places it at about 20 percent of the S&P 500's consumer discretionary
sector.
Its growing clout has called for comparisons with rival Wal-Mart, whose growth
in the early 2000s raised concerns it would put smaller retailers out of
business.
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"In some ways I don't know if the Amazon effect is much different from what
we've seen with Wal-Mart or Microsoft," said Jim Paulsen, chief investment
strategist at The Leuthold Group in Minneapolis.
"There's fewer and fewer players and more concentration. It's the result of
winner-takes-all scenarios."
(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos, additional reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch;
Editing by David Gregorio)
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