Anyone that follows the Estimize consensus knows that it’s a pretty rare occurrence when our crowdsourced expectations are below the Wall Street consensus. Up until this morning this was the case with Wal-Mart, typically seen as bearish signal. Currently Estimize is calling for Walmart’s EPS to come in at $1.46 when they report on Thursday before the opening bell, in-line with the Street. Revenues on the other hand are more or less in-line at $130.386B and $130.354B, respectively.
These revenue estimates have fallen by over $1B for Estimize, and $2B for Wall Street in the last 3 months. Declining expectations have to do with guidance Walmart gave at their October analyst day, lowering FY 2016 guidance and claiming YoY sales growth would be flat due to wage hikes and FX headwinds. The outlook for fiscal 2017 was even worse, with the retailer anticipating a 6 – 12% drop in year-over-year profits. Despite the excuses given, most investors took this as a sign that competition from Amazon was the most likely culprit.
Beyond Amazon pressures, analysts are also concerned about the deep discounts and promotions that were employed during the holiday season to move inventory, paired with higher e-commerce activity which comes with lower margins. However, so far in 2016, shares of WMT are up 7.3%, while the S&P 500 is down around the same amount. It goes without saying that Walmart certainly has defensive appeal, and in this uncertain environment could serve as a safer bet. The retailer’s largest demographic is low-income consumers who are benefiting more heavily from lower gas prices and falling unemployment, and as a result are spending a greater proportion of those savings.
WMT data by YCharts
Earlier this year the world’s largest retailer announced that it would be closing 270 stores in the U.S. and overseas. Many locations affected are smaller Walmart Express stores, and announced closings represent less than 1% of Walmart’s worldwide sales. Despite store closures, Walmart plans to open over 300 new stores in fiscal 2017, including 50 to 60 supercenters in more profitable locations.
To squeeze as much profit out of shoppers as they possibly can, many of these new stores will now include gas stations operated by Walmart itself. While tanking oil prices have come at the detriment of oil and gas companies, they haven’t hurt gas-station owners. Gas revenues have fallen, but so have expenses. Cheaper prices at the pump mean more discretionary income available for higher margin purchases such as food and cigarettes.
Beyond brick and mortar, Walmart is looking to develop a digital relationship with customers through the launch of Walmart Pay, the first step in their e-payment strategy. Up until this point, no mobile payment methods such as Apple Pay or Google Wallet were accepted at the retailer’s locations. The e-payment option will be accessible through the Walmart app which is already being utilized by 22M customers each month, and is how over half of all holiday purchases were made in 2015.
While it could be a rough quarter for Walmart, the long-term outlook seems more promising, especially considering how low the bar has been set for FY 2017.
Do you agree with the Estimize community on Walmart. Be sure to get your estimate in here before Thursday’s report!