Kicking Around Preliminary Earnings Trends in the Consumer Space

 | Jan 24, 2024 11:57

  • December Retail Sales were impressive, generally topping economists' estimates

  • Three Consumer Discretionary companies provided earnings updates earlier this month

  • Spotting key volatility catalysts on the calendar is key ahead of the retail reporting season next month

  • Never bet against the American consumer. That's what so many pundits say, and the December Retail Sales report put out by the US Census Bureau last Wednesday underscored strength in spending to wrap up 2023. Both the headline figure and the "control group," which backs out some volatile categories, came in well above economists' estimates. Later that morning, the National Retail Federation (NRF) confirmed that shoppers were indeed out and about during Q4 – total holiday spending growth verified at +3.8% compared to 2022, though that was within the NRF's forecast range from early November.

    h2 Smaller Savings, Positive Real Wage Growth/h2

    So, all's well on the demand front, right? Well, not so fast. We are still a few weeks from hearing how the world's biggest and most important retailers performed around the holidays. It's reasonable to assert, however, that the bar has been raised in light of these new data points. While pandemic-related excess savings continues to dwindle, workers are earning positive real wages, perhaps to the tune of 1%-plus in 2024 if some forecasters are correct. That would be a significant tailwind for discretionary apparel and merchandise companies. Shares of said firms generally rallied over the final two months of last year. 2024 has been a tougher slog, though, as evidenced by a nearly 10% decline in the SPDR® S&P Retail ETF (NYSE:XRT) since a peak right after Santa's big scene.

    But are there clues we can glean from some of the smaller domestic retailers? Our team spotted three preliminary earnings reports that paint a mixed picture as to the state of household spending.

    h2 Boot Barn: Mixed Guidance Update, Earnings on Tap/h2

    Back on January 5, Boot Barn (NYSE:BOOT), a $2.2 billion market cap company in the Apparel Retail industry within the Consumer Discretionary sector, jumped following the release of an early read on its Q3 net income per diluted share. Its management team now expects the profit figure to come in ahead of its previous guidance range of $1.67 to $1.79, though the firm sees Q3 2024 net sales of $520. million, below analysts' estimates. Overall, quarterly same-store sales are forecast to drop 9.7%, according to the company press release ahead of the ICR Conference earlier this month.

    BOOT has taken it on the chin since the stock notched a multi-month high above $100 last August. With shares now about 30% lower, investors hope that continued decent consumer spending in 2024 can lift both profits and the stock. We will find out more when the final Q3 numbers cross the wires on Wednesday, January 31 AMC.

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