Bed Bath & Beyond: Be Careful Of The Free Cash Flow Defense

 | Jun 25, 2017 02:05AM ET

Bed Bath & Beyond Inc (NASDAQ:BBBY) reported 1Q earnings that were drastically below what were already low expectations heading into the quarter. The company reported EPS of $0.53, which was well-below consensus of $0.66, and the stock declined 12% on Friday.

There have been some contrarians that have come out in defense of the company, arguing that Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ:BBBY) generates significant free cash flow and returns much of that in the form of share buybacks and dividends.

But here's why that argument is misguided. This sort of defense works for a company like Staples, where profitability is stable, and net income is flat. This is not the case for Bed Bath & Beyond, which has deteriorating fundamentals across the board. Free cash flow will eventually follow, meaning that share buybacks and repurchases are not sustainable.

To show this, I'll first walk through the deterioration in fundamentals. I'll then connect this to free cash flow and show how that hurts the free cash flow outlook going forward. Finally I'll address what I see as the bull case is for the stock.

h3 Comps Struggling Amid Competition/h3

The argument that I laid out several years ago is still largely the same - competition is taking share from Bed Bath and Beyond .

1Q17 comps came in at -2%, which was well-below expectations for roughly flat comps. Outside of 2008, this was the worst comp in the data that we have going back to 1992, and the 5th negative comp in the last 6 quarters.