Tag Archives: Ross Stores

Stock Up for the Coming Collapse

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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You should stock up for the coming economic collapse, because American businesses aren’t. A just-released Commerce Department report adds to the growing list of indices pointing to a major economic decline coming our way. February inventories rose just 0.1%, well below the 0.4% increase economists had anticipated and much worse than the downwardly revised 0.9% increase seen in January.

When companies slowly rebuild their inventories, as they are now, it means factories produce less, lowering overall economic output. And if we look at the Institute for Supply Management’s inventory survey for March, we get a sense that when Commerce releases its own figures for the month, it’s going to look ugly. The ISM survey showed a 2% decline in March inventories to 49.5, an indication that things are contracting at an accelerated rate. 

The down escalator
That’s on top of a collapse in consumer confidence, the non-participation rate in the labor market hitting Depression-era levels, unadjusted weekly unemployment claims jumping again, vehicle sales missing estimates, and a whole slew of other economic indicators coming in below expectations.

Clothing and accessories retailers had their best showing in February, as inventories gained 3% from January. Yet as we saw just recently, March retail sales contracted, so the uptick that was enjoyed is apparently over already, and coupled with a gloomy consumer outlook, those tax increases implemented at the start of the year are beginning to weigh down the economy.

Try this on for size
While some clothing shops such as Gap beat analyst expectations on same-store sales last month, the fact that they were down 1% anyway is hardly a source of confidence. TJX was down 2.2%, while Ross Stores was up 2%, actually beating expectations, but far below the 10% jump it experienced a year ago. 

Although some of the sales declines in March were the result of lower gas sales, Americans also spent less on other goods. Even among big-box retailers, the results were disappointing. Costco  reported that same-store sales rose 4% in March, but they were significantly below the 5.2% analysts were anticipating. Overall, the Thomson Reuters index of retailers showed that comps grew just 2.2% last month, its lowest showing since September 2009.

Running off the road
One of the bright spots of the economy has been automakers, but there, too, car sales fell 1.3% in March to an annual pace of 15.3 million, down from 15.4 million the month before. Where Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler all reported sales gains, they couldn’t make up for the losses at many foreign manufacturers, and it’s showing, as car sales are steadily falling.

Many analysts point to the increase in taxes at the start of the year, particularly payroll taxes, as the lead cause for the slack showing up. The economy appears to be ratcheting down rather abruptly, following Europe‘s epic slide into a double-dip recession that even China couldn’t stanch.

Perhaps we don’t need to act like doomsday preppers, but then again, stocking up for a potentially

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/14/stock-up-for-the-coming-collapse/

Retailers Push The Dow Higher Again

By Jeremy Bowman, The Motley Fool

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average took one step closer to a perfect week today, gaining 63 points or 0.4%, to finish at 14,865, as a number of strong retail reports helped boost investor confidence. Ross Stores, Rite Aid, and Zumiez all jumped 6% or more, pulling up the broader sector and the market as a whole, as investors seemed to be reassured that consumers were still spending despite the payroll tax increase, and concerns about sequestration. Tomorrow’s official retail sales report could help confirm today’s news.

A lower-than-expected initial unemployment claims report also helped push stocks higher. New jobless claims dropped to 346,000, from 388,000 the week before, perhaps proving that last week’s spike was just a fluke.

Tech stocks, however, were down sharply, as a report from International Data Corp. showed that PC shipments globally dropped 14% in the first quarter, the worst quarterly drop since the research firm started tracking sales in 1994. The tech-heavy Nasdaq was the poorest performer of the three major indexes, moving up just 0.1%.

Not surprisingly, Hewlett-Packard shares took the news, particularly hard, falling 6.5%. The report also showed that rival Lenovo gained market share, while HP and Dell dropped. Lenovo finished the quarter with a 14.7% share, just slightly behind HP, with 14.8%, according to Gartner. Microsoft and Intel were also off sharply as well, falling 4.4% and 2% respectively.

Pfizer was the biggest gainer on the Dow, a strong gainer for the second day in row, moving up 2.4% after the FDA called its new breast-cancer drug a “breakthrough” innovation. The FDA designation should help speed up the approval process for palbociclib, and comes at a time when Pfizer has been dealing with a patent cliff from the recent expiration of Lipitor.

The massive wave of mobile computing has done much to unseat the major players in the PC market, including venerable technology names like Hewlett-Packard. However, HP‘s rapidly shifting its strategy under the new leadership of CEO Meg Whitman. But does this make HP one of the least-appreciated turnaround stories on the market, or is this a minor blip on its road to irrelevance? The Motley Fool’s technology analyst details exactly what investors need to know about HP in our new premium research report. Just click here now to get your copy today.

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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/11/retailers-push-the-dow-higher-again/

Stocks Rise for Fourth Day in a Row, Led by Retail

By The Associated Press

Filed under: ,

Alamy

By MATTHEW CRAFT

NEW YORK (AP) – Rite Aid (RAD), Ross Stores (ROST) and other retailers surged Thursday after turning in better sales, and major stock market indexes rose for a fourth day straight.

The discount chain Ross Stores jumped 6 percent, the best gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index. The company said stronger sales in March will likely push profits above its previous estimate this quarter. The stock jumped $3.56 to $63.80.

A surprising drop in claims for unemployment benefits last week gave investors more encouragement. Analysts said it could mean a slowdown in hiring last month may have been temporary.

“The numbers today make it seem like that March report was an anomaly,” said David Heidl, a regional investment manager at U.S. Bank’s wealth management unit. “It’s another reason for optimism.”

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 62.90 points to close at 14,865.14, an increase of 0.4 percent. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 5.64 points, also 0.4 percent, to 1,593.37.

Rite Aid soared 18 percent to $2.12 after the drugstore chain said higher sales of generic drugs and lower costs helped it post better earnings than analysts had expected.

Makers of computer hardware and software sank following a report that first-quarter shipments of PCs dropped 14 percent worldwide over the past year. That’s the steepest fall since International Data Corp. started tracking the industry in 1994.

“The IDC report is much worse than anyone expected,” said David Brown, director of Sabrient Systems, an investment research firm. “That’s obviously shaking up the tech sector, but everything else is resuming the climb.”

The three companies in the Dow that deal in PCs held the index back. Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) dropped 6 percent to $20.88, Microsoft (MSFT) lost 4 percent to $28.93 and Intel fell 2 percent to $21.82. Without them, the Dow would have gained 25 more points.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index rose 2.90 points to 3,300.16. That’s just 0.09 percent, far behind the Dow and S&P 500. Of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500, information technology was the only one to fall.

It was a different story on Wednesday, when technology stocks surged on optimism that businesses would step up spending on computer systems. That pushed the Dow and the S&P 500 index to their third straight day of gains as well as record highs.

The stock market has soared this year, clearing record highs and recovering losses from the financial crisis and Great Recession. For the year, the Dow is up 13 percent, the S&P 500 index 12 percent.

Brown thinks the market can keep climbing. Measured against earnings, the stock market doesn’t look expensive, he said. And compared to the alternatives, like bonds or money-market funds, stocks in many big corporations offer a better source of income. The average stock in the

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/11/stocks-rise-for-fourth-day-in-a-row-led-by-retail/

3 Reasons J.C. Penney Is Living on Borrowed Time

By Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool

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J.C. Penney
announced yesterday that CEO Ron Johnson was stepping down from the helm of the beleaguered discount retailer, naming former top executive Mike Ullman to take his place and return to the position he held from 2004 until Johnson’s hire in 2011. In response, the shares fell more than 12% today, extending a decline that has lopped 60% off J.C. Penney’s stock price in the past year.

Despite the rising chorus of calls for Johnson’s ouster, investors clearly agree that J.C. Penney’s move today isn’t the right answer. Here are three reasons why.

1. Meet the new boss — same as the old boss.
Trying something new only to have it fail is always discouraging. But it’s even more discouraging to see a company choose to throw away the entire past year and a half without learning any lessons from its failure.

To understand how big a step backward this is for Penney, you have to go back to 2011. At the time, it was struggling, having plunged like most of its peers during the financial crisis and then getting left behind in the economic recovery that lifted shares of most of its rival retailers. Activist investor Bill Ackman, who argued for a shakeup in J.C. Penney’s management, noted repeatedly how Ullman failed to manage the company well and gave investors dismal share-price performance. It’s hard to believe that the best the company could do for leadership was to bring Ullman back. If he chooses to ignore the hard-won lessons that Johnson helped J.C. Penney learn, then it’ll be hard for investors to have any confidence that the retailer is likely to find a path out of its troubles.

2. Turning back isn’t an option.
Some investors likely believe by now that they’d be better off if J.C. Penney had never strayed from its coupon-and-discount model in the first place. Even if they’re right, the company can’t assume that by returning to that model now, customers will come back.

Once-loyal customers who felt betrayed by Penney’s strategic shift largely fled to competitors. Some stepped up to upscale retailer Macy’s, which has seen a real revival in its business over the past year. Others likely went to fellow discounters TJX and Ross Stores, both of which have executed very well by offering name-brand merchandise at deep discounts to normal retail prices. For Penney to try to win those customers back would take a huge investment, and even then, having been burned once, they’ll never have the same loyalty they once had to the retailer.

Source: Retail Industry Total Return Price data by YCharts.

3. Big-box retail is on its way out.
As if it weren’t bad enough that its competitors have benefited from its woes, J.C. Penney has to deal with the longer-term trend that has threatened not just it but big-box retail in …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why Ross Stores Is Poised to Bounce Back

By Brian Pacampara, The Motley Fool

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Based on the aggregated intelligence of 180,000-plus investors participating in Motley Fool CAPS, the Fool’s free investing community, off-price apparel and home fashion retailer Ross Stores has earned a respected four-star ranking.

With that in mind, let’s take a closer look at Ross Stores and see what CAPS investors are saying about the stock right now.

Ross Stores facts

 

 

Headquarters (founded)

Pleasanton, Calif. (1957)

Market Cap

$13.1 billion

Industry

Apparel retail

Trailing-12-Month Revenue

$9.7 billion

Management

CEO Michael Balmuth

COO Michael O’Sullivan

Return on Equity (average, past 3 years)

46.5%

Cash/Debt

$647.9 million/$150.0 million

Dividend Yield

1.1%

Competitors

Kohl’s

TJX Companies 

Wal-Mart Stores 

Sources: S&P Capital IQ and Motley Fool CAPS.

On CAPS, 92% of the 427 members who have rated Ross Stores believe the stock will outperform the S&P 500 going forward.

Just last week, one of those bulls, JMacSol, succinctly summed up the Ross Stores bull case for our community:

Buying on the recent pullback. Low leverage. Safe dividend (probably growing, given the size of the cash balance). So much more room for growth in revenues (high y/o/y EBIT growth and OCF, relative to peers).

To learn about two other retailers with especially good prospects, take a look at The Motley Fool’s special free report: “The Death of Wal-Mart: The Real Cash Kings Changing the Face of Retail.” In it, you’ll see how these two cash kings are able to consistently outperform and how they’re planning to ride the waves of retail’s changing tide. You can access it by clicking here.

Want to see how well (or not so well) the stocks in this series are performing? Follow the TrackPoisedTo CAPS account.

The article Why Ross Stores Is Poised to Bounce Back originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Brian Pacampara has no position in any stocks mentioned, and neither does The Motley Fool. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Dow May Rise on U.S. Data Despite Euro Slowdown

By Roland Head, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — Stock index futures at 7 a.m. EDT indicate that the Dow Jones Industrial Average may open 0.07% higher this morning, while the S&P 500 may open 0.03% lower.

While the Cyprus bailout crisis continues to rumble on without a solution — the country’s banks will now be closed until Tuesday — the latest eurozone purchasing managers’ index data has overshadowed Cyprus this morning. The Markit eurozone composite flash PMI fell to 46.5 in March from 47.9 in February, suggesting that the eurozone recession is continuing to worsen. France is becoming a particular worry: Its service-sector PMI fell to 41.9, the lowest level since February 2009. Even Germany’s economy is struggling to stay positive: The German composite PMI, which includes manufacturing and services, fell to 51 from 53.3 in March.

European markets saw a broad sell-off this morning, with the FTSE 100 down by 0.8% as of 7:20 a.m. EDT. However, weak data from the eurozone was tempered by better news from China, where the HSBC China Manufacturing PMI rose to 51.7 in March, up from 50.4 the previous month.

In the U.S., the first major macro data will be the latest weekly jobless claims, due at 8:30 a.m. EDT. Initial jobless claims are expected to have risen to 340,000 last week, up slightly from the previous week’s surprise low of 332,000. Other data due today includes the Markit flash PMI for March at 9 a.m. EDT and a raft of housing-market data, including the FHFA home price index for January and February’s existing-home sales data, which are expected to show that sales of existing homes rose to 5.02 million in February, up from 4.92 million in January.

In company news, Lululemon Athletica, Ross Stores, and homebuilder KB Home are due to report quarterly earnings before the opening bell, while Nike is due to report its third-quarter earnings after markets close today. Meanwhile, Oracle shares are likely to be actively traded this morning after they plunged 7.7% in premarket trading. The company’s third-quarter earnings disappointed markets: Oracle’s sales fell from $9.1 billion in the second quarter to $9 billion in the third quarter, while adjusted earnings came in at $0.65 per share, missing analysts’ forecasts for $0.66 per share on sales of $9.37 billion.

Finally, let’s not forget that the Dow’s daily movements can add up to some serious long-term gains. Indeed, Warren Buffett recently wrote, “The Dow advanced from 66 to 11,497 in the 20th Century, a staggering 17,320% increase that materialized despite four costly wars, a Great Depression and many recessions.” If you, like Buffett, are convinced about the long-term power of the Dow, you should read “5 Stocks To Retire On.” Your long-term wealth could be transformed, even in this uncertain economy. Simply click here now to download this free, no-obligation report.

The article Dow May Rise on U.S. Data Despite Euro Slowdown originally appeared on Fool.com.


<a target=_blank …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Will These Numbers from Ross Stores Be Good Enough for You?

By Seth Jayson, The Motley Fool

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Ross Stores (NAS: ROST) is expected to report Q4 earnings on March 21. Here’s what Wall Street wants to see:

The 10-second takeaway
Comparing the upcoming quarter to the prior-year quarter, average analyst estimates predict Ross Stores‘s revenues will increase 14.7% and EPS will grow 25.9%.

The average estimate for revenue is $2.75 billion. On the bottom line, the average EPS estimate is $1.07.

Revenue details
Last quarter, Ross Stores reported revenue of $2.26 billion. GAAP reported sales were 11% higher than the prior-year quarter’s $2.05 billion.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Quarterly periods. Dollar amounts in millions. Non-GAAP figures may vary to maintain comparability with estimates.

EPS details
Last quarter, EPS came in at $0.72. GAAP EPS of $0.72 for Q3 were 14% higher than the prior-year quarter’s $0.63 per share.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Quarterly periods. Non-GAAP figures may vary to maintain comparability with estimates.

Recent performance
For the preceding quarter, gross margin was 27.1%, 10 basis points worse than the prior-year quarter. Operating margin was 11.3%, 40 basis points better than the prior-year quarter. Net margin was 7.1%, 10 basis points better than the prior-year quarter.

Looking ahead

The full year’s average estimate for revenue is $9.70 billion. The average EPS estimate is $3.55.

Investor sentiment
The stock has a four-star rating (out of five) at Motley Fool CAPS, with 385 members out of 420 rating the stock outperform, and 35 members rating it underperform. Among 119 CAPS All-Star picks (recommendations by the highest-ranked CAPS members), 116 give Ross Stores a green thumbs-up, and three give it a red thumbs-down.

Of Wall Street recommendations tracked by S&P Capital IQ, the average opinion on Ross Stores is outperform, with an average price target of $72.45.

Is Ross Stores the right retailer for your portfolio? Learn how to maximize your investment income and “Secure Your Future With 9 Rock-Solid Dividend Stocks,” including one above-average retailing powerhouse. Click here for instant access to this free report.

The article Will These Numbers from Ross Stores Be Good Enough for You? originally appeared on Fool.com.


Seth Jayson had no position in any company mentioned here at the time of publication. You can view his stock holdings here. He is co-advisor of
Motley Fool Hidden Gems, which provides new small-cap ideas every month, backed by a real-money portfolio. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services <a target=_blank …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Dean Foods Takes Over #178 Spot From Ross Stores

By DividendChannel.com In a study of analyst recommendations at the major brokerages, for the underlying components of the S&P 500, Dean Foods Co. (NYSE: DF) has taken over the #178 spot from Ross Stores, Inc. (NASD: ROST), according to ETF Channel. Below is a chart of Dean Foods Co. versus Ross Stores, Inc. plotting their respective rank within the S&P 500 over time (DF plotted in blue; ROST plotted in green):
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Markets