Week Ahead: Investors Brace For Retail Sector Earnings; Dollar Could Correct

 | May 22, 2022 07:42

  • Walmart, Target earnings are leading indicators of sector losses, even broader market
  • Yields change course but still weigh on equities
  • Dollar could correct
  • Bitcoin on the verge of a further slump
  • After last week's 'retail apocalypse' was triggered by major retailers such as Target (NYSE:TGT) and Walmart (NYSE:WMT) disappointing more significantly on earnings than expected, investors now nervously await a slew of additional earnings reports from an array of high profile vendors in the upcoming trading week. These include Costco (NASDAQ:COST), Best Buy (NYSE:BBY), Nordstrom (NYSE:JWN), Macy’s (NYSE:M), Dollar Tree (NASDAQ:DLTR), Ulta Beauty (NASDAQ:ULTA), Dick’s Sporting Goods (NYSE:DKS) and Dollar General (NYSE:DG).

    Last Wednesday, after Target substantially missed on expectations, the stock opened sharply lower and was then hammered by investors— losing almost 25% for the day, dropping an additional 3.2% on Thursday morning before reversing. For its part, Walmart, which reported on Tuesday, lost almost 19% of value through Thursday before reversing higher on Friday. It was the biggest selloff for the retailers since 1987, demonstrating that companies can't grow profits amid spiking inflation as some stakeholders had hoped.

    The giant retailers' results were doubly shocking after US retail sales showed resilience in April, increasing 0.9%. So why did those retail giants lose money if consumer spending increased? Turns out the data was misleading ; it hadn't been inflation-adjusted. The "real" data it turns out, was negative for the second month in a row.

    Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) plunged too as investors realized the e-commerce behemoth faces the same economic hazards as Target and Walmart. But the retail rout didn't end there. Other large retailers, all slated to report this coming week also slumped after Target's report, most losing 10% or more of value, underperforming the S&P 500 Index, where most of these companies are listed.

    Macy's slumped 10.7% while Best Buy dropped 10.8% as both topped out with their prices falling below their 200-week MA.