Edmonton Journal

Jolly season for Canadian Tire retail sales

- HOLLIE SHAW Financial Post hshaw@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/HollieKSha­w

TORONTO Canadian Tire capped off a strong year of retail performanc­e with robust sales in its core retail stores, helped by improved merchandis­ing and sales of its house-branded goods.

“I don’t think Canadian Tire retail’s same-store sales growth was a record, but it came very close,” chief executive Stephen Wetmore told analysts and investors on the retailer’s fourth-quarter conference call Thursday. He said sales of holiday-related seasonal merchandis­e were strong, and noted 80 per cent of its Christmas-related merchandis­e sales are under brands it owns.

The automotive and housewares retailer’s sales and margins were further improved by the company’s investment­s in data analytics to help optimize pricing, promotions and merchandis­e, Wetmore said.

Earnings rose 10 per cent to $246.8 million in the period ended Dec. 31, or $3.46 per share, compared with $225.2 million, ($3.01), in the same period last year. That beat analysts’ mean estimates of $3.39, according to Thomson Reuters. The retailer’s shares climbed 6.88 per cent to $154.51 in Toronto on Thursday.

The news comes after a decidedly mixed holiday season for retailers, particular­ly for U.S. merchants. Canadian Tire has been investing heavily in data analytics and e-commerce in an effort to better serve customers who use the Internet to browse, research and shop for goods. The retailer’s sales, general and administra­tive expenses rose in the period to $910.8 million from $823.8 million a year ago.

“Skill-set investment, primarily, was driving (expenses) in the fourth quarter,” Wetmore told analysts, explaining the company invested in “outside help” to teach its employees about areas of operationa­l efficiency. The retailer also spent money on digital initiative­s.

Web traffic continues to grow at CanadianTi­re.ca, with 300 million visits in 2016, but the CEO did not outline new initiative­s for the digital division in 2017.

Same-store sales, a key measure of retail performanc­e tallying volume at locations open for more than a year, rose 8.1 per cent at Canadian Tire’s retail stores compared with the same quarter of 2015. At FGL Sports, same-store sales rose 5.1 per cent, and same-store sales rose 10.8 per cent at the company’s Mark’s apparel division.

For the full year, Canadian Tire’s revenue rose to $12.7 billion in 2016 from $12.3 billion in 2015. Overall revenue at Canadian Tire climbed 7.7 per cent to $3.64 billion, up from $3.38 billion last year.

 ?? LAURA PEDERSEN/FILES ?? Canadian Tire chief executive Stephen Wetmore says the retailer’s Q4 same-store sales growth was close to a record.
LAURA PEDERSEN/FILES Canadian Tire chief executive Stephen Wetmore says the retailer’s Q4 same-store sales growth was close to a record.

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