Black Friday darker for some retail stocks than others
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[November 25, 2019] By
Noel Randewich
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The U.S. holiday
shopping period kicking off on Friday may heighten Wall Street's
perception of a growing divide between retailers adapting to online
sales and those unable to shake their reliance on dwindling shopping
mall traffic.
On one side are companies including Target <TGT.N>, Costco <COST.O> and
Best Buy <BBY.N>, which have bulked up their online presence, deliveries
and fast in-store pickups attractive to customers and have seen their
stocks outperform. Also among the winners are shares of Ross Stores <ROST.O>
and TJX Companies <TJX.N> - apparel discounters offering consumers
attractive value.
At the other end of the divide, GAP <GPS.N>, Victoria Secret-owner L
Brands <LB.N> and department stores Macy's <M.N> and Kohl's <KSS.N> have
slumped as those one-time mall powerhouses struggle to successfully
revamp their products and locations and keep customers visiting.
(GRAPHIC: S&P 500 retail top performers -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/12/9073/8985/SP500%20Retail%20Top%20Performers.jpg )
(GRAPHIC: S&P 500 retail bottom performers -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/12/9074/8986/Bottom%20Retailers%20YTD.jpg )
The first weekend after Thanksgiving can be make-or-break for retailers
strategizing over how much and when to discount their products
throughout a hyper-competitive month-long shopping season.
Moody's retail analyst Charlie O'Shea offers advice for investors
visiting malls in the week following Thanksgiving to look for potential
winners and losers.
"Promotions on Tuesday are a sign of desperation," O'Shea said. "It
means somebody missed the weekend, they have to clear stuff out, and
their cadence is off. And if they go the other way, it means they had a
good weekend and they can take their foot off the gas."
Supported by the lowest unemployment rate in nearly 50 years, consumer
spending has helped insulate the economy from the White House's 16-month
trade war with China. But the Commerce Department's report on October
retail sales suggests consumer spending is slowing faster than
economists expected.
Weaker spending could mean less of a cushion to retailers, which would
particularly hurt those stores that are already struggling.
Adding to difficulties, retailers have been scrambling to cut costs and
find ways to minimize the damage to their bottom lines from tariffs
already levied on $250 million Chinese imports and upcoming tariffs on
another $300 worth of Chinese imports.
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People ride an escalator in H & M during a Black Friday sales event
in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., November 23, 2018. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly -/File Photo
"The stores that are not going to do so well are the ones with a middle of the
road proposition. The ones that aren't overly expensive but are also not great
value." warned Neil Saunders, managing director of research firm GlobalData
Retail.
Such stores at risk include GAP Inc, Macy's, JC Penney <JCP.N> and Express Inc <EXPR.K>,
Saunders said.
Shares of Nordstrom <JWN.N>, GAP and Kohl's are down by between 18% and 35% in
2019 as they fight to compete against big-box rivals and Amazon.com.
(GRAPHIC: S&P 500 retailers' YTD performance -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/12/9070/8982/SPX%20Retailers%20YTD.jpg )
Quarterly reports last week underscored the retail industry's haves and
have-nots, with Target surging record highs after it raised its full-year
earnings forecast on Wednesday, and department stores Macy's and Kohl's cutting
their outlooks ahead of the holiday season.
Recent quarterly reports show "mall-based" retailers' earnings tumbling 17%,
with "off-mall" retailers increasing their earnings by 7%, Retail Metrics said
in a recent report.
"Size and scale matter to drive crucial investments in store remodels, digital
channel upgrades, supply chain, and next-day, same-day delivery capabilities,"
according to Retail Metrics.
Macy's has lost half of its value this year, the poorest performance among S&P
500 retailers. Showing how little investors expect Macy's to recover, its stock
last month traded at as low as 5.6 times expected earnings, its lowest earnings
multiple ever, according to Refinitiv.
However, overall stock performance for the retail sector has almost kept up with
the broader market's rally, even as investors worry that the cost of
increasingly generous shipping offers from Walmart <WMT.N>, Amazon <AMZN.O>,
Target, Best Buy and others will eat into their profits.
The S&P 500 Retailing index <.SPXRT> is up 20% for the year, compared to the S&P
500's 24% rise. Meanwhile, investors betting Amazon's domination of the retail
industry would completely devastate its competitors have been burned. The
ProShares Decline of the Retail Store ETF <EMTY.K>, which shorts an index of
brick-and-mortar store chains, has lost 3% this year.
(Reporting by Noel Randewich; Editing by Alden Bentley and Nick Zieminski)
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