Retail Earnings Could Highlight Split Between Brick-And-Mortar Vs E-Commerce

 | May 05, 2020 09:22AM ET

For retailers, Q1 earnings might resemble a Charles Dickens novel as a tale of two sectors: Essential and nonessential—or perhaps brick-and-mortar and e-commerce.

Companies with the goods consumers needed as they hunkered down at home are widely expected to have rung up relatively healthy sales numbers, analysts said. Those that sold discretionary items probably struggled.

And it could be better yet for those essential retailers with strong e-commerce platforms to peddle food, aseptic solutions and even lumber (home repair projects seem popular now as people can’t really go anywhere). Non-store retail sales in March, at the onset of the shutdown throughout the U.S. slipped 3.1%, according to the Commerce Department. That sounds disappointing, but not when you look at overall retail sales that month falling 8.7%, making March the worst month ever for retail sales in data going back to 1992.

As many stockpiled food and filled medicine cabinets and linen closets with health and personal-care products, retailers hawking groceries, toilet paper and other household products generally saw their stocks surge while those offering discretionary items sputtered.

The results for retailers such as Target (NYSE:TGT), Costco (NASDAQ:COST), Home Depot (NYSE:HD), and Lowe’s (NYSE:LOW) might offer a peek into what consumers were buying and doing during their quarantines. Apparel sales overall tumbled 50.5%, according to the Commerce Dept; grocery store sales vaulted 26.9%. As Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) showed us during last week’s conference call (see below), you have to get those top line sales numbers into the bottom line.

Those considered nonessential, like Macy’s (NYSE:M)) and Kohl’s (NYSE:KSS) that sell goods besides apparel like footwear, beauty products, and housewares, struggled under the weight of store closure and shift to non-discretionary purchases. Unlike their essential counterparts that were mostly open for business, discretionary retail storefronts were nearly all dark, closed by state and city mandates throughout most of the country for much of the quarter.

Investors might expect to see that reflected in the earnings results that will begin to trickle out in coming weeks. They might also go into earnings season with their eyes wide open: Even those stores that were allowed to let consumers in and had robust online sales platforms could well have found their expenses went through the roof.

If Amazon’s (AMZN) results and forecast are any indication about what might be ahead for other essential retailers, do as Amazon Chief Executive Jeff Bezos suggested to his shareholders: “You may want to take a seat.”

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J Crew just did. They filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in what CNN called “the first major retail casualty of the pandemic.” The company is privately held.

h2 The Rise and Quarantine Fall/h2

For many retailers, including department stores, the quarter started out on a strong note. After a buoyant holiday season, consumers looked like they were willing and able to spend.

But when the winds of coronavirus blew in, the quarter took a nasty turn for all but a handful of retailers. The quarantines, of course, put a dent in consumer spending. But it’s the massive job loss that’s likely punched it right through.

When retailers open their books on the period, investors might best be prepared for the devastation that tens of thousands of shuttered stores for weeks and weeks did to sales and balance sheets.

For many, sales could be down in very high double digits; for others online sales might have soared but probably not nearly enough to balance the loss of foot traffic and impulse purchasing that happens in stores.

AMZN, for example, said its sales jumped 26.5% but its net profit plunged more than 30% as costs of running the business—think social-distancing and personal protection equipment, logistics and delivery, and high labor hiring and training—skyrocketed (see chart below).