Tag Archives: Eddie Lampert

Consider This Your Mulligan for Sears Hometown and Outlets

By Michael Lewis, The Motley Fool

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After a less-than-favorable earnings release earlier this week, Sears Hometown and Outlets sank double digits in the market. Investors and analysts were clearly upset at the softer-than-expected January demand and a minor decrease in same-store sales, but in the next couple of days the stock regained much of its loss. The reality is, Sears Hometown is on track to deliver attractive shareholder value over the next several months for a few reasons. Allow me to reiterate, with updates from this recent earnings release, why Sears Hometown should be your top retail stock.

Why the stock plopped, then propped
Since its IPO last fall, Sears Hometown and Outlets has been on a near vertical climb. This week, however, the stock stumbled in a big way — down 14% on Wednesday. CEO Bruce Johnson attributed the weak same-store sales figures, down 0.5%, to a weak January. The thing is, though, the company has been phasing out its consumer electronics section from stores. In the fourth quarter, it successfully wound down the electronics section of 589 stores. With that category excluded, same-store sales actually grew 1.1%.

In other areas, the company performed nearly as expected. Operating income rose more than 40% to $17.3 million. On the bottom line, EPS grew 23.5% to $0.42 per share. Adjusted EBITDA fell 23% year over year, but the prior year did not have the same costs associated with being a stand-alone company. In the year ago quarter, Sears Hometown was still a part of Sears Holdings.

As explained in earlier articles, Sears Hometown is boosting margins by converting company-owned stores to franchise models. This was evident in the last quarter with gross margins at 24.8%, up from 23.4% in the year-ago quarter. The boost in operating income was not just a matter of the extra week in the calendar year or any one-time event but due to increased sales and improved margins. These are the organic gains we want to see in a retail operation such as this.

For the full year, net sales rose 4.7% to $2.5 billion. Without the 53rd week, sales would have likely been flat. Gross margins improved substantially, hitting 25% over 22.3% in 2011. This, again, is due largely to lower operating costs from the newly adopted franchise model. Even with net sales essentially flat, operating income for the year grew to $99.5 million, compared to $55.3 million in 2011. Sears Hometown hauled in $121.6 million in operating cash flow to help bump its current cash reserve to just over $20 million, compared to $0.7 million in January of last year.

While not an out-of-the-park earnings release, Sears Hometown and Outlets seems to be playing out the investing thesis I outlined in prior articles. Here’s a quick review of what that entails.

The Sears elevator pitch
We all know that Sears Holdings is considered a struggling enterprise by many investors and analysts. Sure, sales are sluggish as Eddie Lampert officially takes the reins. While …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Sears Shares Rise on Solid Results

By 24/7 Wall St.

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Sears Holdings Corp. (NASDAQ: SHLD) reported fourth-quarter and fiscal year 2012 results before markets opened this morning.

The department store operator reported quarterly adjusted diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $1.12 on revenues of $12.3 billion. In the same period a year ago, Sears reported EPS of $0.54 on revenue of $12.5 billion. This morning’s results also compare to the Thomson Reuters consensus estimates for EPS of $0.98 and $11.77 billion in revenue.

On a GAAP basis, the company posted a quarterly net loss of $4.61 per share, compared with a net loss of $22.63 per share in the fourth quarter of 2011.

For the full year, Sears posted an adjusted EPS loss of $2.03 on revenues of $39.85 billion compared with a full-year 2011 loss of $4.52 per share. On a GAAP basis, the 2012 EPS loss totaled $8.78, compared with a loss of $29.40 on revenues of $41.57 billion in 2011. The consensus 2012 estimate called for a loss of $2.28 on revenues of $39.66 billion.

The company’s chairman and CEO, Eddie Lampert, wrote a letter to shareholders in which he denies that Sears’ problems come from underinvesting in the company’s stores. He notes:

In reality, and as I have discussed in prior shareholder letters, the progression of the Internet and mobile technology is fundamentally reshaping many industries, with retail being one of the largest. Increased price transparency, better customer-level information and analytics, faster supply chains and the advent of social networking and social media are all contributing to making running a large retail organization more complex.

There has been a significant amount of turnover at the highest levels of retail leadership and it only seems to be increasing. Changes at the CEO or President level of Safeway, Toys “R” Us, Staples, JCPenney, Best Buy and others are signs that the talent needed to transform companies in the retail industry today and the persistence required to see transformations through are not easy to come by. I believe that we are seeing an enormous shift in the type of talent that will be running retail enterprises in the future, similar to the shift that Google brought to the advertising business and that quants brought to financial services.

Whether or not Lampert counts himself as one of the new breed of retail CEOs isn’t clear, but pointing to J.C. Penney Co. Inc. (NYSE: JCP) and Best Buy Co. Inc. (NYSE: BBY) as examples of new talent with different skills probably is not encouraging to investors. J.C. Penney last night reported an adjusted EPS loss of $1.95 for its fourth quarter, and the company is setting plans to return to its prior practice of scheduling sales.

Sears did not offer guidance, nor is there a consensus EPS estimate. A consensus revenue estimate is $8.9 billion. For the full year, the consensus estimate calls for an EPS loss of $3.14 on revenues of $36.03 billion.

Sears’ shares are up 3.2% in premarket trading this morning, at $49.00 in a 52-week …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance