Kohl’s Stock Is Becoming Affordable

 | May 31, 2022 04:04AM ET

Retail department store chain Kohl's (NYSE:KSS) stock disappointed investors by falling short on both earnings and guidance on its fiscal Q1 2022 earnings report.

Shares of the retailer had previously remained at a premium as the Company has stated its intent to explore strategic alternatives and rumors of a $62 buyout price have been floating around.

However, the nasty fiscal Q1 2022 earnings performance caused shares to collapse as interest from suitors appears to have been diminished temporarily largely due to lack of financing.

Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG) has squashed any rumors of its interest in a buyout. The retailer has suffered from supply chain disruption, logistics, and inflationary pressures as sales growth went negative in the quarter.

Shares are trading at less than 6.5X forward earnings with a 5% dividend yield . The Company has noted that sales demand has improved in May and is still awaiting fully financed binding proposals from potential suitors in the coming weeks.

Prudent investors that have been patiently waiting for opportunistic pullback levels can watch to scale into a position down here with a potential for acquisition as an added bonus.

h2 Q1 Fiscal 2021 Earnings Release /h2

On May 19, 2022, Kohl’s released its fiscal first-quarter 2022 results for the quarter ending April 2022. The Company reported an adjusted earnings-per-share (EPS) profit of $0.11 excluding non-recurring items versus consensus analyst estimates for a profit of $0.70, missing estimates by (-$0.59).

Revenues fell by (-4.4%) year-over-year (YOY) to $3.71 billion beating analyst estimates for $3.69 billion. Kohl’s CEO Michelle Gass stated,

"The year has started out below our expectations. Following a strong start to the quarter with positive low-single digits comps through late March, sales considerably weakened in April as we encountered macro headwinds related to lapping last year’s stimulus and an inflationary consumer environment.

"We remain committed to our long-term strategy and are encouraged that our updated store experience, with Sephora at Kohl’s shops, delivered positive comparable store sales across these 200 locations for the quarter.

"We continue to expect our business to improve as the year progresses, with growth in the second half as we benefit from the roll out of 400 additional Sephora stores, enhanced loyalty rewards and further investment in our stores."

h2 Strategic Alternatives /h2

The board will continue to explore strategic alternatives. CEO Gass commented,

“Regarding our review of strategic alternatives, we continue to engage with multiple interested parties. We have formally communicated the specific procedures for the submission of actionable bids due in the coming weeks. We continue with our detailed diligence phase and are pleased with the number of parties who recognize the value of our business and plan.”

h2 Lowered Full-Year 2023 Guidance/h2
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Kohl’s raised its fiscal full-year 2023 EPS guidance to $6.45 to $6.85 versus $7.15 consensus analyst estimates, down from prior guidance range of $7.00 to $7.50.

The Company sees revenue growth of 0 to 1% YoY growth, down from 2% to 3% or $18.47 billion to $18.66 billion versus $18.92 billion analyst estimates.

h2 Conference Call Takeaways /h2

CEO Gass started off addressing the “unusual amount of attention and speculation” in regard to potential acquisition from suitors. She underscored the commitment of the Board to run the sales process with the shareholders’ best interest in mind.

The Board is awaiting fully financed binding proposals with multiple engaged parties in the coming weeks. She noted how the quarter started off strong but fell sharply due to macro headwinds from inflationary pressures as last years stimulus was lapped.

However, they have seen trends improve in May as weather turned favorable to accelerate demand for its spring products. The first quarter suffered a (-5%) sales decline led by Children’s and Home businesses. The Home business was a top benefactor during the pandemic, so a reversion can be expected.

While Home business was up 30% last year, it declined (-17%) in the quarter and accounts for 15% of total sales. The Company expects demand to continue to be weak but will continue to leverage its pricing elasticity to remain competitive.

The Childrens business is expected to recover through the year as seasonal weather resumes. The Sephora store within a store partnership is strong and the Company expects to expand them to 600 locations.

The Company expects sequential improvements in Q2 and positive growth to resume in the second half of 2022.