San Francisco Chronicle

How retailers have reacted to pandemic

- By Anne D’Innocenzio Anne D’Innocenzio is an Associated Press writer.

Late last year, Best Buy began testing curbside pickup at select stores as a way to respond to customer needs. But that was then. The pandemic accelerate­d the company’s plans and what was supposed to take months instead took just 48 hours, with Best Buy offering curbside pickup at nearly all of its 1,000 locations in late March as customers sought to minimize contagion by ordering online and pulling up to stores to collect their purchases.

That made all the difference, enabling Best Buy to retain 81% of last year’s sales in the first quarter even with its stores closed to shoppers, according to the company’s earnings release Thursday.

“There are scenarios we plan for as business leaders, and then there are events that simply do not have a playbook,” Best Buy CEO Corie Barry told analysts Thursday. “This is one of those times.”

It’s the latest example of how bigbox stores like Best Buy, Target, Walmart and others were able to capitalize on their digital expertise and stay relevant during the pandemic. As a result, they thrived during the fiscal first quarter.

Meanwhile, Macy’s and other mallbased clothing chains like Victoria’s Secret struggled to adapt. Macy’s sales were down 45% and the company says it could have a loss of at least $1 billion in the quarter. In contrast to Best Buy, it took Macy’s nine weeks to introduce curbside pickup at 300 stores, or about 40% of its total.

Macy’s sells clothing and other merchandis­e that shoppers aren’t necessaril­y clamoring for in the middle of a pandemic, while Best Buy offers items like computers and other electronic­s that suddenly became indispensa­ble as more people began working from home. Macy’s was also quicker to offer curbside pickup compared with its department store peers.

But it shows how the pandemic is deepening the divide between bigbox stores and clothing chains in malls. UBS predicts 100,000 store closings by 2025. Already, J. Crew, Neiman Marcus, Stages Stores and J.C. Penney have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the last month. Victoria’s Secret said that it will be closing 250 stores — about a quarter of its total — in the next few months.

“The divide was already widening between the bigbox operators and mallbased retailers,” said Ken Perkins, president of Retail Metrics. “The pandemic is now pushing it to the brink.”

Perkins said bigbox retailers have it in their DNA “to adjust quickly, and were very early to adapt online early on their business.”

“Department stores conversely have been very slow to change,” he said. “Their business model has deteriorat­ed.”

Perkins said that nonmall based stores are on track to post an average firstquart­er earnings drop of 20.5%. That compares to mallbased chains, which are seeing earnings down more than threefold, according to his roster of 103 retailers.

Walmart and Target, both of considered essential and allowed to stay open because they carry items like toilet paper and groceries, reported soaring online sales and strong store sales while using their stores as distributi­on hubs.

Target CEO Brian Cornell said its stores were directly involved in supplying goods for 80% of online sales. Sameday services such as curbside pickup nearly tripled. Walmart, meanwhile, used about 2,500 stores to ship online orders. Lowe’s CEO Marvin Ellison said that its recent move to revamp its outdated website months ago with allowed it to move quickly to curbside pickup at its stores.

Analysts are closely watching shoppers’ behavior and their willingnes­s to go back to the stores that are reopening.

TJX Cos., which operates T.J. Maxx, HomeGoods and Marshalls and is usually one of the retail darlings, took a beating because it was forced to temporaril­y close its stores and its fledgling online business. But the company sees “strong initial“sales from the stores that have reopened, and analysts believe the chain will bounce back. Its online site is now live.

Kohl’s said this week that sales had slumped more than 40% and it lost money in its first quarter. But CEO Michelle Gass believes the chain will fare better than its peers since most of its stores are at strip centers. So far, it’s reopened about 50% of its 1,100 stores across the country.

Macy’s CEO Jeff Gennette said sales at the stores that have reopened have been “moderately higher than anticipate­d.” He initially had expected that the reopened stores would generate less than 20% of their typical activity in the beginning stages.

Macy’s has acknowledg­ed that it will emerge from the pandemic a smaller company. It began to reopen its stores early this month, and about 190 Macy’s and Bloomingda­le’s locations are operating in one form or another as of this week. It expects 80 more of the Macy’s stores to open for Memorial Day weekend, and most of the stores, including its flagship locations in Manhattan, to open in midJune.

The New York department store said in a preliminar­y report that sales could plummet to around $3 billion from the $5.5 billion in sales booked just a year ago. It said it would probably record a quarterly loss of between $905,000 and $1.1 billion. It reported a steady increase in online business in April, but only partially offset the loss of store sales.

Macy’s had a profit of $203 million in last year’s first quarter, which ended on May 2.

The company will release more details about its quarterly performanc­e early next month.

 ?? Chris Carlson / Associated Press ?? Bicyclists pass in front of a closed Macy’s department store in Santa Ana in March. The retailer warned Thursday that it could lose more than $1 billion during its first quarter.
Chris Carlson / Associated Press Bicyclists pass in front of a closed Macy’s department store in Santa Ana in March. The retailer warned Thursday that it could lose more than $1 billion during its first quarter.

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