Wal-Mart Sees Profitable Low-Price Year

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MARCUS KABEL | February 19, 2008 04:26 PM EST | AP

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A shopper walks to her car at the Wal-Mart Stores Inc. in Brunswick, Maine, on Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008. The world's largest retailer announced its renewed focus on low prices has paid off with a 4-percent rise in profit for its fourth quarter. (AP Photo/Pat Wellenbach)

Defying the gloom that many retailers are feeling, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. expects a more profitable year selling to penny-pinching shoppers after its renewed focus on low prices paid off over the holidays with a 4 percent rise in fourth-quarter profit.

The world's largest retailer, emerging from a yearlong turnaround effort after sales stumbles in 2005 and 2006, said Tuesday that aggressive holiday discounts and improvements in its more than 4,000 U.S. stores boosted sales despite consumer worries.

"No one has a crystal ball to look into the economic future, but we know the economy will be a critical factor this year," Chief Executive Lee Scott said in a recorded call after releasing results.

Scott said Wal-Mart's decision to re-emphasize low prices last year came at the right time and added: "In a volatile economy, I believe we are well positioned to succeed."

Chief Financial Officer Tom Schoewe told The Associated Press that Wal-Mart expects a spending boost as consumers receive federal income tax rebates under the $168 billion economic stimulus plan.

"When those checks have been issued in the past, we've experienced (spending) either equal to or indexed a little bit higher than our overall market share," Schoewe said. "The customer is under pressure and they want to make that dollar last as long as they can."

Wal-Mart forecast earnings per share for the current fiscal year that ends next Jan. 31 of $3.30 to $3.43, or growth between 4.4 percent and 8.5 percent compared to just over 8 percent in fiscal 2008. The analyst consensus for full-year EPS was $3.43, according to Thomson Financial.

Goldman Sachs said in a research note that Wal-Mart had therefore set a midpoint in its forecast range that was short of the consensus but called it "a prudent move given today's challenging environment."

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Wal-Mart shares rose 22 cents to $49.66, still near the top of their 52-week range of $42.09 to $51.48.

Analysts said Wal-Mart has several unique factors, including the scale of its grocery business that can bring in traffic for other areas of the store, so that its optimism for the year ahead is not necessarily an indicator for the broader retail sector.

"If I was grading them, I would give Wal-Mart a 'B'. Unfortunately the rest of retail is getting a 'C-minus'. So on the bell curve they look like a shining example," said Patricia Edwards from investment manager Wentworth Hauser and Violich, which has about 400,000 Wal-Mart shares.

"They have the opportunity, especially in this type of economic environment, to really outpace the competition," Edwards said.

As major U.S. retailers report their fourth-quarter earnings results, the industry is bracing for its bleakest times since the 1991 recession. Other merchants have closed stores, laid off thousands of employees, scaled back store expansions or pared inventories as consumer spending screeches to a halt.

Wal-Mart, though, said net profit in the quarter ended Jan. 31 rose to $4.096 billion, or $1.02 per share, from $3.94 billion, or 95 cents a share, a year earlier. Net sales grew 8.3 percent to $106.27 billion, helped by 18.8 percent international growth and 5 percent growth at U.S. Wal-Mart stores.

Stores in 13 countries outside the U.S. accounted for about 25 percent of total company sales in the quarter, up from 23 percent a year earlier.

Fourth-quarter profit included a charge of 3 cents per share for dropped real estate projects and restructuring its Japanese operation as well as a 1 cent per share gain from real estate sales. Minus the charges, earnings would have been $1.04 per share.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial had expected profit of $1.02 per share on revenue of $106.9 billion.

Scott said Wal-Mart benefited from strong holiday business after moving early last fall to discount groceries, toys and home electronics, including name-brand flat-screen televisions and computers. Health and wellness items also sold well, he said.

Wal-Mart also made progress on customer service, Scott said. He cited cleaner stores, fewer out-of-stock products and faster checkout lanes.

Rising fuel costs are putting pressure on margins, said the head of Wal-Mart's U.S. stores, Eduardo Castro-Wright. Diesel for the company's huge fleet of trucks rose about 25 percent a gallon last year and Castro-Wright called the issue a "potential headwind" for the year ahead.

Castro-Wright said Wal-Mart is introducing new clothing brands to revive its apparel business, which has lagged other areas of the store. New lines this year include kids' brand Grranimals and more Hannah Montana products licensed from The Walt Disney Co.

For the fiscal year ended Jan. 31, Wal-Mart earned $12.73 billion, or $3.13 a share, up from $11.28 billion, or $2.71, a year earlier. Net sales rose 8.6 percent to $374.53 billion. Overall revenue rose to $378.80 billion from $348.65 billion a year ago.

Defying the gloom that many retailers are feeling, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. expects a more profitable year selling to penny-pinching shoppers after its renewed focus on low prices paid off over the holida...
Defying the gloom that many retailers are feeling, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. expects a more profitable year selling to penny-pinching shoppers after its renewed focus on low prices paid off over the holida...
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- MajorKong I'm a Fan of MajorKong 405 fans permalink
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That's great! I'm sure Wal-Mart will pass a percentage of those profits on to their employees in the form of higher wages and benefits.

< sound of crickets chirping >

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:33 PM on 02/19/2008
- ohiomark I'm a Fan of ohiomark 123 fans permalink

When they were struggling, I didn't see anyone demand that the employees give their pay back.

The employees that deserve a raise will get one. If they don't like it, they can go work at K-Mart.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 AM on 02/20/2008
- doctordawg I'm a Fan of doctordawg 10 fans permalink

Death to America! Shop at Wal-Mart! Where everyday is a low-price jihad!

John McCain just said this of Fidel Castro's resignation "That is why we must press the Cuban regime to release all political prisoners unconditionally, to legalize all political parties, ***labor unions*** and free media,"

Pro labor unions, except for Walmart. Hillary won't be championing unions at Walmart anytime soon, either.

Long live hypocrisy!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:47 PM on 02/19/2008
- ibsteve2u I'm a Fan of ibsteve2u 148 fans permalink
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Price of oil going up, weakness in the housing market, a slowing economy, lay-offs in the financial industry...all positives for Wal-Mart.

It is just arithmetic: LDI = MWS

(Less Disposable Income = More Wal-Mart Shoppers.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 02/19/2008

I know lots of people that work at WalMart. They say health insurance is very expensive and lots can't afford the insurance. They stop giving pay increases after so many years of being on the job. WalMart does the minimum for its employees. While Sam Walton's family live high on the hog. He had a daughter or granddaughter that paid someone to take tests for her and wrote papers for her in college. They get the breaks that Sam Walton built up and they did nothing but party and take advantage of its employees and bully companies to mark their prices down to sell in their stores. Captialism at its best huh?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 02/19/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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Oh, you betcha, 'belle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 02/19/2008
- LCRover001 I'm a Fan of LCRover001 20 fans permalink

Sam has been doing summersaults in his grave since the 80's. Wal-Mart was once a company that took care of their wok force, now it is as greedy and crooked as the oil industry. Wal-Mart continues to increase profits because it continues to devour competition, aid/force companies to send work to China to keep its everyday “low” cost, and abuse its work force.

The catch is that after it has driven it competition away those low prices creep up, until they are no longer a bargain, but it is still cheaper than driving to the next town or county to shop. Wal-Mart wants all of the profit from sales so items bought there are substandard. Yea it is basically the same but you get what you pay for, unfortunately it is junk. You’ll save a buck or two but the item will wear and break down twice as fast as the higher cost one from some where else. On top of that the other product will most likely be made in the U.S. and not China. Wal-Mart use to advertise about its made in the U.S.A. products and now you’d be hard pressed to find a hand full in the Super Stores they build. I don’t think I have to go over how Wal-Mart treats its work force. It is disgusting and a model of GOP capitalism. Trickle down economics equates to pissing down the working mans/woman’s back and telling them it’s raining.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 02/20/2008
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Walmart doesn't need to announce layoffs because they fire hundreds everyday. Life is good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 02/19/2008

First!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 02/19/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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1.a. sub-first

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 PM on 02/19/2008
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