Walmart forecasts smaller profit drop this year as discounts stimulate demand
Global News
Sales at Walmart's U.S. stores open for at least a year rose 6.5 per cent due to higher prices and an easing of fuel inflation, and beat its prior forecast for a six per cent gain.
Walmart Inc. nudged up its annual profit forecast on Tuesday, partly reversing a hefty cut less than a month ago, as discounts to clear excess merchandise and lower fuel prices helped it beat expectations for quarterly sales.
The stock, which has fallen over eight per cent this year, rose four per cent in premarket trading. Shares of rivals Target Corp., Costco and Best Buy also climbed on the news, while futures for the blue-chip Dow index cut losses.
Walmart said it now expected fiscal 2023 adjusted earnings per share to fall nine to 11 per cent.
Last month, the top U.S. retailer spooked markets across the globe when it forecast a drop of 11 to 13 per cent – down from previous guidance for a one per cent fall – and warned consumers were pulling back on discretionary purchases at a far greater pace than feared as soaring inflation hit their spending power.
That forced Walmart to make steep price cuts on items such as apparel to try to reduce more than US$61 billion worth of inventory it was sitting on at the end of the first quarter.
A host of other retailers including Target Corp and Best Buy Co Inc. have also issued profit warnings in recent weeks as they struggle with excess merchandise.
Walmart reported inventories of US$59.92 billion at the end of the second quarter ended July 31, still 25 per cent above last year’s levels.
“I think it’s going to take another quarter, maybe get into the fourth quarter a little bit, to get back to where we want to be from an overall inventory perspective,” Walmart’s Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said.