San Francisco Chronicle

Walmart’s earnings beat expectatio­ns

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

Walmart defied a gloomy government retail sales report for December, delivering fiscal fourth-quarter profits and sales that beat Wall Street expectatio­ns.

The world’s largest retailer also enjoyed another quarter of surging e-commerce sales during the critical holiday period as it expanded its online assortment and services.

The report provides more evidence that Walmart’s efforts to expand online grocery services, including curbside pickup and home delivery, are widening the gap between itself and traditiona­l rivals while at the same time holding its own against online leader Amazon.

The strong performanc­e from the world’s

largest retailer is especially encouragin­g after a very weak December retail sales report last week from the U.S. Commerce Department led many to fear that consumers had gone into hiding. Some analysts even questioned the reliabilit­y of the government report.

The data, delayed by a government shutdown, hinted that a volatile stock market, a government impasse, and a trade war with China had taken their toll on the American psyche. That, at least in Walmart’s case, appears to be untrue.

Walmart executives said Tuesday that its customers are benefiting from a stronger economy. The company also said that its sales got a lift from the government issuing February checks to Supplement­ary Nutrition Assistance Program recipients early in the wake of the government impasse.

“The consumer still feels pretty good,” Brett Biggs, Walmart’s chief financial officer told analysts on an earnings call Tuesday, ticking off economic tail winds like lower gas prices and rising wages. “A number of things are still working. We are watching, making sure that we are in the right place with the customer. No matter the environmen­t, we are able to react.”

Walmart and other retailers are also benefiting from the woes of others. Toys R Us and Bon-Ton Stores have gone out of business, and the list of casualties keeps getting longer. This week, Payless ShoeSource began liquidatio­n sales at roughly 2,500 stores in North America. Sears is shrinking and J.C. Penney is flounderin­g.

A diverse roster of retailers including Macy’s, Target and Home Depot are slated to report fiscal fourth-quarter results in the next few weeks. Target had reported strong holiday sales in January while several other department stores including Macy’s offered disappoint­ing results.

Walmart posted strong sales across a wide range of products from toys to groceries and electronic­s. That helped sales at stores open at least a year rise 4.2 percent at its U.S. namesake stores, following a 3.4 percent pace in the fiscal third quarter. The figure excludes sales from fuel.

Since buying Jet more than two years ago, Walmart has been expanding online by acquiring brands and adding thousands of items. Walmart now offers grocery delivery service at 800 stores and grocery pickup at 2,100 stores. Walmart has revamped its website with a focus on fashion and home furnishing­s. That all helped to drive a 43 percent increase in ecommerce sales in the quarter, matching the pace from the previous period.

Walmart’s online U.S. sales are still a fraction of Amazon’s online global merchandis­e empire, which reached $122.98 billion last year. Walmart’s U.S. online sales for the first nine months of its latest fiscal year reached $10.2 billion. The discounter hasn’t yet disclosed the year-end figures. But it has rapidly expanded its services online fast.

“Pleasingly, Walmart is successful­ly broadening its online base of customers and is now attracting both younger and more affluent demographi­cs,” wrote Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, a retail research firm in a published report. “These are early days, but Walmart is now a serious contender in the online space and presents a much more serious threat to Amazon than it did 18 months ago.”

Walmart had a fourth-quarter profit of $3.69 billion ($1.27 per share). Earnings, removing one-time items, were $1.41 per share, which is 8 cents better than analysts had expected.

The Bentonvill­e, Ark., company had revenue of $138.79 billion, also better than expected.

The company’s Sam’s Club division had a 3.3 percent increase in revenue at stores opened at least a year during the fiscal fourth quarter.

Outside the U.S., Walmart is reshaping its internatio­nal business, scaling back in Brazil, while pushing hard into markets with big growth opportunit­ies like China and India. Last year, Walmart bought a $16 billion controllin­g stake in India’s online retailer Flipkart. Walmart’s CEO Doug McMillon told analysts Tuesday he was disappoint­ed in the more stringent rules by the Indian government to curb how foreign e-commerce companies operate, but it “hasn’t shaken our confidence.”

Shares of Walmart rose more than 2 percent to close at $102.20.

 ?? David J. Phillip / Associated Press 2018 ?? Shoppers like these at a Houston Walmart helped push the world’s largest retailer’s financial results higher for the fourth quarter, which included the crucial holiday shopping period.
David J. Phillip / Associated Press 2018 Shoppers like these at a Houston Walmart helped push the world’s largest retailer’s financial results higher for the fourth quarter, which included the crucial holiday shopping period.

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