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Walmart Earnings: 4Q Profit Rises 22 Percent

ANNE D'INNOCENZIO   02/18/10 07:15 PM ET   AP

Walmart Profit
Wal-Mart Profit Rises 22 Percent In 4Q

NEW YORK — After nearly 50 years of hammering competitors with discounts, Wal-Mart is getting a taste of its own medicine.

The world's largest retailer has seen sales at its U.S. Walmart stores fall for the first time, as price-cutting competitors lure away bargain-hunters. Department stores and dollar stores are muscling in on the company's discount turf.

And executives do not expect much improvement in the current quarter, forecasting sales at stores open at least a year will range from down 1 percent to up 1 percent.

"They're being squeezed from the top ... and from the bottom," said Michael Hicks, associate professor of economics at Ball State University who wrote a book about Wal-Mart's economic impact.

Overall, Wal-Mart's overseas growth and a concerted cost-cutting campaign pushed profit up 22 percent in the fourth quarter. Wal-Mart earned $4.63 billion, or $1.21 per share, up from $3.8 billion, or 96 cents per share, in the same quarter last year. Excluding businesses that the company no longer operates, it earned $1.23 per share.

The 0.5 percent sales decline reported Thursday covered the three months ending Jan. 31 at the company's namesake stores. It was the first year-over-year quarterly decline since Wal-Mart Stores Inc. went public in 1969. And it was a remarkable stumble for an institution revered and reviled for its relentless expansion and economic power.

Department stores such as Macy's and Kohl's came into the holiday season ready to compete on price and saw sales rise as a result in December and January.

On the other end, discounters like Family Dollar Stores have added more groceries. And even Sears Holdings Corp.'s long-suffering Kmart has seen a rebound in sales. Target Corp., which has been increasing its food offerings and focusing on low prices in its advertising, is slated to report fourth-quarter results Tuesday.

Organic grocer Whole Foods Markets Inc., often known as "Whole Paycheck" for its high prices, even got into the price-cutting game, helping bring back customers who abandoned it in the recession.

Wal-Mart's own parade of holiday discounts had less effect, as the chain drew fewer shoppers who spent less per trip.

The weak U.S. sales underscored the financial pressures the company's customers continue to face and raised concerns about its ability to keep new and more affluent shoppers, who are seeing an abundance of cheap options.

The overall spending pie has shrunk as shoppers, worried about high unemployment and tight credit, have cut back their spending.

Wal-Mart officials said that deflation in such areas as electronics and groceries was the biggest factor in dampening sales, but the company's chief financial officer, Tom Schoewe, acknowledged "tough" competition this past holiday season from rivals.

The company also cited a massive store renovation program as keeping some customers away.

Schoewe said falling prices for food and electronics, which have helped to drag down revenue for the past three quarters, were worse than expected. Groceries make up about half of Wal-Mart's business.

The overall average price of flat-panel TVs, for example, fell to $545 in December, compared with $743 in the year-ago period, according to NPD Group Inc., a market research firm. Food deflation was fueled by falling meat, produce and dairy prices.

Still, the company's vice chairman who oversees the U.S. business said the discounter picked up market share in electronics. And if price decreases are excluded, Wal-Mart sold groceries at the same pace as its rivals.

But Wal-Mart also noted that shoppers have continued to scale back on discretionary items, resulting in disappointing sales of clothing and most home products.

Economists have been watching for signs of a consumer resurgence, but Wal-Mart said economic conditions are not getting much better for its customers. Emblematic of the strains are sharp increases in spending when paychecks or government payments are issued, indicating that people are waiting for those to be able to spend.

It's a crucial question, because recent economic reports have shown an expanding economy, but one that's depended on factories churning out goods for businesses with depleted stockpiles, rather than from consumer spending.

The overall economy expanded at an annual rate of 5.7 percent in the fourth quarter, but only about one-fourth of that growth came from consumers, who normally drive 70 percent of the economy.

Some shoppers say they are not depending on Wal-Mart for bargains anymore. Cicily Prestridge Strain always researches product prices before she buys them and finds that increasingly, Walmart stores cannot compete.

"Walmart does not have the bargains in clothing, electronics and toys that just shopping on the Internet can do if you're a savvy price shopper like me," said Strain, 39, a psychologist in Slidell, La.

___

Associated Press writers Emily Fredrix and Mae Anderson in New York and Martin Crutsinger in Washington contributed to this story.

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NEW YORK — After nearly 50 years of hammering competitors with discounts, Wal-Mart is getting a taste of its own medicine. The world's largest retailer has seen sales at its U.S. Walmart stores...
NEW YORK — After nearly 50 years of hammering competitors with discounts, Wal-Mart is getting a taste of its own medicine. The world's largest retailer has seen sales at its U.S. Walmart stores...
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02:45 PM on 02/20/2010
Thank goodness! I was so worried about the the children. Especially the one with onl 18 Billion.
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SmartladyDem
Woman for OBAMA!
12:33 PM on 02/20/2010
Google, (Walmart, shopping for subsidies). The subsidies even include the land and the buildings that Walmart (owns)
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10:40 AM on 02/20/2010
Remember in the 80s and early 90s when Wal-Mart used to brag about how much Made in the USA stuff they had for sale? Now they've pushed all their suppliers overseas to lower their prices even more. Wal-Mart should really take down that American flag they have hanging up at the store entrance. They've degraded it economically.
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10:36 AM on 02/20/2010
Wal-Mart is actually a bit on the pricey side for non-grocery items. You can find similar items elsewhere for less if you comparison shop. Heck, you can get basic clothes at Macy's for a few bucks more and the quality is outstanding compared to Wal-Mart. Their groceries are dirt cheap, hands-down compared to the supermarket chains, but Wal-Mart's produce and bakery are awful.

Our income is pretty good for middle class folk, but Wal-Mart will never be our first pick for anything. Other than groceries, they don't offer anything worth our spending cash. It's too big and full of funky people and cheap junk.
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DavidShort
02:32 PM on 02/19/2010
I shop at WalMart because I have a need for a product, and I don't want to pay a lot for it. It is as simple as that. The reason Main Street suffers when WalMart expands into the area is because they simply can't compete. Artificially offsetting that competition by passing laws to restrict its admission doesn't address that reason. In the business world, the victor wins. If a business cannot compete, it goes out of business.

This is not about being Patriotic or not, this is about business. I have X amount of money to spend. Where can I get the most for that money? Markets differ across these United States, but where I live, I can get a better deal at WalMart than at most every store. When it is worth my time and gas, I will go to another store for a specific purchase. WalMart doesn't carry everything, so I do have to go to other stores to meet those needs. But when you figure in gas and time to the purchase cost, WalMart wins my money.

As a consumer, you have every right and responsibility to spend your money the way you wish. If you dislike a business, you are under no obligation to shop there. Deny them your purchasing dollars. But to suggest and even pass legislation to prevent the choice in the marketplace is not the way to deal with business reality.
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FightingTheRight
That isn't God's voice in your head.
11:21 AM on 02/20/2010
I always like to point out to people how their taxes subsidize Walmart's ability to offer "low prices".

Walmart has 1/3 more of its workers on government ran, taxpayer subsidized health insurance coverage, than any other retailer in the U.S.
10:26 AM on 02/21/2010
And therein lies a problem.

How much of what Walmart sells is "made in USA"?

The financial crisis has shown any who care to see it, that the biggest problem facing America today is the shrinking middle class. Manufacturing used to provide a great many middle class jobs, until they were outsourced to countries where labor can be forced to work 12 hr days, 6 day weeks, with no benefits, so that manufacturers can pay three to fifteen cents (that's right, cents) for labor on a shirt that they sell for 20 to 40 dollars in the US.

The American consumer does not get the bulk of the savings for sweatshop labor, corporate management does.

If price competition is the SOLE decider as to what business survives and which one doesn't., then we're in an endless spiral to the bottom. Eventually even the U.S. will not survive under these rules of competition, unless you yourself are also willing to work 12 hr days, 6 days a week, for pennies a day. Something management would love to see, they could eliminate the cost of translators and become that much more profitable.
09:20 AM on 02/19/2010
Who woud have thought the South would rise again, not with guns but with Walmarts.
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
01:29 AM on 02/19/2010
http://walmartwatch.com/
10:05 PM on 02/18/2010
What is it like inside a Wallmart, never been...
02:57 AM on 02/19/2010
Wallmart tried to get into the market in Germany and failed after trying for 2 years.

First of all they manage to have the same stale, damp smell in their outlets. I was in Wallmarts in the USA and they had the same smell. Discount markets in Germany have either food or clothing, Wallmart has it all. So the place is huge and filled with crap. Unless you are poor you wouldn't wear any of the stuff. And the place smells of quiet desparation. I bought groceries and the products were fine, no complaints here. The employees I had to deal with were all very friendly, a phenomena you find in German discount stores as well. Although very poorly paid they have a good attitude towards the customer.

If you need groceries, beer, cosmetics, etc. it is safe to shop there. Should you need clothing, apart from underwear or socks, fly to Europe.
sarabono
Oldie but Goody
09:52 PM on 02/18/2010
See if you can find anything, other than toilet paper, that is sold at Walmart and made in the USA.

All clothing, appliances, furniture, home accessories, even many auto parts, are not made in the USA.
On top of that, the quality is just OK on many items and quite poor on others (furniture for example).

And Americans wonder where there jobs went? Just look at Walmart.
10:57 PM on 02/18/2010
yes, Walmart is now one of our largest employers.
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
08:26 AM on 02/19/2010
you must mean largest slave runner !!
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Jannsmoor
12:03 PM on 02/19/2010
Do you even follow the news? For every low paying job at Walmart, two better paying jobs on main street were destroyed.
What is it about low paying, low benefit jobs that so fascinates and attracts you?
09:52 PM on 02/18/2010
Walmart is the antichrist. I will do anything to avoid them. They have ruined small towns across america. Hail to New Hampshire, who banned them.
06:23 PM on 02/18/2010
good articles: http://bertreport.blogspot.com/
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amber15
06:22 PM on 02/18/2010
if you want to know the truth about Walmarts 'strategic' profits watch this documentary......

http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/wal-mart-the-high-cost-of-low-price/

Walmart is well known for making your tax dollars support their billions of profit every year........smooth operation indeed.
05:46 PM on 02/18/2010
Here in N Alabama--we are surrounded by Supa WalMarts. The stuff they sell is poor quality-- clothes, and other things--and not much cheaper than going to a department store and buying stuff on sale--where the quality is a little better. The produce in WalMarts here is really poor--wrinkled cucumbers, frozen celery as examples of what I have seen available--just really awful stuff. But at the one in a more affluent suburb--you'll see no such thing in THAT store, and at the same prices. I do my shopping at a variety of their competitors now, even though it's more of a pain to make multiple stops instead of one.

Greed has certainly changed the face of America
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Artos
Down with Tyrants
04:17 PM on 02/18/2010
Didn't Walmart just layoff 11,000 workers from it's Sam's Club Stores. Now I wonder how much profit that is? If this is their idea of cost cutting then it's nothing new, just par for the course. I imagine that there will be a big Hallelujah in Wall Street, as there usually is when people lose their jobs for the sake of Wall Street profiteering. Sure the economy is getting better and my name is Santa Claus.
nwlover
My Lab is smarter than your honor student
04:02 PM on 02/18/2010
I discovered Wallmart when my local Safeway stores all remodeled, then immediately jacked up their prices to "high end" levels. With a few exceptions, their variety and quality is fine.
Recently, I noticed Safeway woke up and is starting to bring their prices back down some.
Overall, I like Wallmart very much, and they have a great website from which I have purchased a lawn mower, a hedger, a printer, and a digital camera. No shipping charges if you pick it up at the store. Nice
04:07 PM on 02/18/2010
you know how i would drive the unwashed masses into Walmart if i was the FED?

Buy controlling interests in ALL grocery store chains in America through the FED and its Pet Banks, and with the Control, have ALL grocery stores jack up their prices, thus driving the unwashed masses into Walmart.
04:09 PM on 02/18/2010
the same thing can be done by Buying controlling interests in Shopping Mall chains, and with that control, and the control over inflation the FED has, you can drive the prices up AS you remove jobs, and lower wages across America

and drive the poor to Walmart!