Nordstrom‘s stock soared after the company released a mixed earnings report that showed weakening sales, but handily beat Wall Street profit estimates.
Its stock rose about 5% in extended trading, after initially jumping more than 21%.
Here’s how the company did, compared with what Wall Street was expecting, according to Refinitiv consensus estimates:
- Adjusted earnings per share: 90 cents, vs. 75 cents estimated
- Revenue: $3.87 billion, vs. $3.93 billion estimated
“We delivered strong bottom-line results, demonstrating our inventory and expense discipline. We exited the quarter in a favorable inventory position and made important strides in productivity,” said Erik Nordstrom, co-president of Nordstrom.
Investors traditionally respond well to strong inventory discipline, which Nordstrom cited as a key driver in the fiscal second-quarter earnings beat. The company said inventory was down 6.5% over the last year, marking the second consecutive quarter of positive spread between inventory and sales. In comparison, Macy’s last week said in its fiscal second-quarter earnings report that it used heavy markdowns and discounts to clear inventory, as shares tanked 13% that day.
Sales at full-price department stores fell 6.5% during the quarter ended Aug. 3, compared with a 5% drop last year. Net sales at its off-price Nordstrom Rack stores fell 1.9%, a steep decline from the 7% rise in the same year-ago period.
The company slashed its net sales guidance for the fiscal year and earnings guidance. It forecasts net sales for the year to decrease by about 2%. It previously estimated sales would be flat to 2% down. It also slightly lowered guidance on earnings per share to a range of $3.25 to $3.50, compared with the prior guidance of between $3.25 to $3.65. The company said it did not factor impeding tariffs into the forecast, but believes they “will be relatively immaterial for the year.”
On an unadjusted basis, net income fell by almost 13% to $141 million, or 90 cents a share, compared with $162 million or 95 cents a share a year earlier.
Nordstrom also said its digital sales, which represent 30% of the business, grew 7%. In the same quarter last year, its digital sales represented 28% of its total sales.
The company is among a host of department stores that is struggling to grow sales. Annual sales at U.S. department stores have dropped 20% from 2017 to 2018, and are on pace to fall more this year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Nordstrom’s stock has fallen 57% in the past year, valuing the company at $4 billion.
Nordstrom’s first department store for women is set to open in New York City on Oct. 24. It marks the largest single-project investment in the company’s history. It also opened up a men’s store in April 2018 and previously only operated a handful of off-price Nordstrom Rack stores in the city. The company said sales from the new opening will mostly materialize in the fourth quarter.
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